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Ranolazine reduces repolarization heterogeneity in symptomatic patients with diabetes and non–flow‐limiting coronary artery stenosis
Author(s) -
Evaristo Ederson,
Stocco Fernando G.,
Shah Nishant R.,
Cheezum Michael K.,
Hainer Jon,
Foster Courtney,
Nearing Bruce D.,
Di Carli Marcelo,
Verrier Richard L.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
annals of noninvasive electrocardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.494
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1542-474X
pISSN - 1082-720X
DOI - 10.1111/anec.12480
Subject(s) - ranolazine , medicine , cardiology , repolarization , placebo , blood flow , coronary artery disease , stenosis , electrophysiology , alternative medicine , pathology
Background Experimental evidence suggests that ranolazine decreases susceptibility to ischemia‐induced arrhythmias independent of effects on coronary artery blood flow. Objective In symptomatic diabetic patients with non–flow‐limiting coronary artery stenosis with diffuse atherosclerosis and/or microvascular dysfunction, we explored whether ranolazine reduces T‐wave heterogeneity ( TWH ), an electrocardiographic ( ECG ) marker of arrhythmogenic repolarization abnormalities shown to predict sudden cardiac death. Methods We studied all 16 patients with analyzable ECG recordings during rest and exercise tolerance testing before and after 4 weeks of ranolazine in the double‐blind, crossover, placebo‐controlled RAND ‐ CFR trial ( NCT 01754259). TWH was quantified without knowledge of treatment assignment by second central moment analysis, which assesses the interlead splay of T waves in precordial leads about a mean waveform. Myocardial blood flow ( MBF ) was measured by positron emission tomography. Results At baseline, prior to randomization, TWH during rest was 54 ± 7 μV and was not altered following placebo (47 ± 6 μV, p  = .47) but was reduced by 28% (to 39 ± 5 μV, p  = .002) after ranolazine. Ranolazine did not increase MBF at rest. Exercise increased TWH after placebo by 49% (to 70 ± 8 μV, p  = .03). Ranolazine did not reduce TWH during exercise (to 75 ± 16 μV), and there were no differences among the groups ( p  = .95, ANOVA). TWH was not correlated with MBF at rest before ( r 2  = .07, p  = .36) or after ranolazine ( r 2  = .23, p  = .06). Conclusions In symptomatic diabetic patients with non‐flow‐limiting coronary artery stenosis with diffuse atherosclerosis and/or microvascular dysfunction, ranolazine reduced TWH at rest but not during exercise. Reduction in repolarization abnormalities appears to be independent of alterations in MBF .

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