Exercise Care in the Use of Amiodarone and Alternative Antiarrhythmics for the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation



Exercise Care in the Use of Amiodarone and Alternative Antiarrhythmics for the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation


Muhammad Durrani MD

Alan Cheng MD

Edwin G. Avery IV MD



Atrial fibrillation is a common arrhythmia in both the intensive care unit (ICU) and perioperative cardiothoracic surgery settings. The mainstay of therapy is rate control, with beta-blockers being the first-line agents. In more acute clinical situations that involve significant hemodynamic deterioration, synchronized, direct-current cardioversion is immediately indicated. Frequently, however, the decision is made to use rhythm-converting agents, such as amiodarone. Amiodarone is a complex antiarrhythmic agent (predominantly class III) that shares at least some of the properties of each of the other three Vaughn-Williams classes of antiarrhythmics. Amiodarone is commonly used for the treatment and prevention of persistent atrial and ventricular tachyarrhythmias, although it is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) only for management of ventricular arrhythmias. It is one of the few agents that can be used safely in individuals with congestive heart failure. Contraindications to amiodarone include severe sinus node dysfunction with marked sinus bradycardia or syncope, second- or third-degree heart block, known hypersensitivity to its contents, cardiogenic shock, and probably severe chronic lung disease.

Amiodarone is highly lipid-soluble, extensively distributed in the body, and highly concentrated in many tissues, especially in the liver and lungs. After variable (30% to 50%) and slow gastrointestinal (GI) absorption, amiodarone is very slowly eliminated with a half-life of about 25 to 110 days. The onset of action after oral administration is delayed, and a steady-state drug effect may not be established for several months unless large loading doses are used. Amiodarone undergoes extensive hepatic metabolism to the pharmacologically active metabolite, desethylamiodarone (DEA). Amiodarone is excreted not by the kidneys but rather by the lacrimal glands, the skin, and the biliary tract. Neither amiodarone nor DEA is dialyzable.

Amiodarone is both an antiarrhythmic and a potent vasodilator. Amiodarone lengthens the effective refractory period by prolonging the actionpotential duration in all cardiac muscles, including bypass tracts (class III activity). It also has a powerful class I antiarrhtythmic effect that works by inhibiting inactivated sodium channels at high stimulation frequencies.
Amiodarone slows phase 4 depolarization of the sinus node as well as conduction through the atrioventricular node. It also decreases Ca2+ current (class IV effect) and transient outward delayed rectifier and inward rectifier K+ currents. Amiodarone noncompetitively blocks α- and β-adrenergic receptors (class II effect); this effect is additive to competitive receptor inhibition by beta-blockers.

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Jul 1, 2016 | Posted by in ANESTHESIA | Comments Off on Exercise Care in the Use of Amiodarone and Alternative Antiarrhythmics for the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation

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