Antiarrhythmics: Difference between revisions
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Drugs: | |||
[[Lidocaine | [[Lidocaine]] | ||
[[Procainamide | [[Procainamide]] | ||
[[Esmolol | [[Esmolol]] | ||
[[Labetalol | [[Labetalol]] | ||
[[Sotalol | [[Sotalol]] | ||
[[Amiodarone | [[Amiodarone]] | ||
[[Ibutilide | [[Ibutilide]] | ||
[[Diltiazem | [[Diltiazem]] | ||
[[Atropine | [[Atropine]] | ||
[[Adenosine | [[Adenosine]] | ||
[[Digoxin | [[Digoxin]] | ||
[[Isoproterenol | [[Isoproterenol]] | ||
[[Magnesium | [[Magnesium]] | ||
=== Overview table === | === Overview table === | ||
Revision as of 19:02, 10 January 2012
Drugs:
Overview table
| Class | Known as | Examples | Mechanism | Clinical uses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ia | fast-channel blockers-Affect QRS complex |
|
(Na+) channel block (intermediate association/dissociation) |
|
| Ib- Do not affect QRS complex |
|
(Na+) channel block (fast association/dissociation) |
| |
| Ic |
|
(Na+) channel block (slow association/dissociation) |
| |
| II | Beta-blockers | beta blocking Propranolol also shows some class I action |
| |
| III |
|
K+ channel blocker Sotalol is also a beta blocker Amiodarone has Class I, II, and III activity |
| |
| IV | slow-channel blockers |
|
Ca2+ channel blocker |
|
| V | Work by other or unknown mechanisms (Direct nodal inhibition). |
Used in supraventricular arrhythmias, Or in the case of Magnesium Sulfate, used in Torsade de Pointe. |
For Bradyarrythmias:
Source
- Tintinalli
- Katzung & Trevor's Pharmacology
