Hemodynamic effects of intravenously administered quinidine on the transplanted human heart.
Nøgleord
Abstrakt
The acute hemodynamic effects of intravenously administered quinidine were studied in five heart transplant recipients with an anatomically denervated heart. Quinidine, 10 mg/kg body weight, was infused over a 20 minute period, and mild wall left ventricular dynamics were measured with a new technique using metallic markers surgically implanted in the myocardial wall. Heart rate was maintained constant with atrial pacing, and aortic blood pressure was measured through an indwelling catheter. In each patient the hemodynamic responses to quinidine were similar. End-diastolic, end-systolic and stroke volumes decreased by an average of 19, 26 and 18 percent, respectively. Cardiac output decreased by a mean 0.92 liters/min (-18%), and the mean aortic blood pressure decreased by 10 mm Hg (-11%). All of these changes were statistically significant. Three indexes of the contractile state of the left ventricle--mean circumferential velocity, mean systolic diameter shortening and ejection fraction--were not significantly changed. We conclude that quinidine exerts no acute inotropic myocardial effects in the human transplanted heart and that, when given intravenously, its hemodynamic action is most consistent with venodilatation.