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Frontal plane QRS‐T angle in the monitoring of intravenous amiodarone infusion for pharmacological cardioversion of acute atrial fibrillation
Author(s) -
Eyuboglu Mehmet
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of clinical pharmacy and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.622
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2710
pISSN - 0269-4727
DOI - 10.1111/jcpt.13338
Subject(s) - amiodarone , medicine , cardioversion , cardiology , qrs complex , atrial fibrillation , anesthesia , sinus rhythm , electrocardiography , coronal plane , radiology
Abstract What is known and Objective Intravenous amiodarone infusion is effective and widely used treatment for pharmacological cardioversion of recent‐onset atrial fibrillation (Af). Although amiodarone may trigger various alterations in cardiac electrophysiology and electrocardiography (ECG), the impact of amiodarone treatment on frontal plane QRS‐T angle remains unclear. Frontal plane QRS‐T angle is the angle between the depolarization and repolarization axes and indicates instability in the cardiac cellular electrophysiology. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate whether intravenous amiodarone infusion has effect on frontal plane QRS‐T angle in patients with acute Af. Methods A total of 179 patients with acute‐onset Af who underwent pharmacological cardioversion with intravenous amiodarone infusion were included into the study. Patients with successful and failed pharmacological cardioversion were compared regarding pre‐ and post‐treatment frontal plane QRS‐T angle. Results and discussion At the end of the amiodarone infusion, sinus rhythm was restored in 112 (62.6%) patients, whereas Af was persisted in 67 (37.4%) patients. Despite the similar frontal plane QRS‐T angle at baseline (59.6°±21.73°vs.60.4°±25.67°, p = 0.822), patients with failed pharmacological cardioversion had significantly higher post‐treatment frontal plane QRS‐T angle compared to patients with successful pharmacological cardioversion (68.8°±21.71°vs.58.6°±25.15° p < 0.001). Furthermore, multivariate analysis demonstrated that post‐treatment increased frontal plane QRS‐T angle was found to be an independent predictor of failure of pharmacological cardioversion with amiodarone infusion (OR:1.233, 95% CI:1.147–1.919, p = 0.024). What is new and Conclusion Amiodarone may significantly affect the frontal plane QRS‐T angle. As a parameter that can be easily calculated from automated ECG recordings, frontal plane QRS‐T angle may be useful in the monitoring of intravenous amiodarone treatment.