The Impact of Chronic Oral Beta-Blocker Intake on Intravenous Bolus Landiolol Response in Hospitalized Intensive Care Patients with Sudden-Onset Supraventricular Tachycardia-A Post Hoc Analysis of a Cross-Sectional Trial.
Felix EibensteinerEmmilie MosorDaniel TihanyiSonja AndersAndrea KornfehlMarco NeymayerJulia OppenauerChristoph VeiglValentin Al JalaliHans DomanovitsPatrick SulzgruberSebastian SchnaubeltPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2024)
Background: Landiolol, a highly cardioselective agent with a short half-life (2.4-4 min), is commonly used as a perfusor or bolus application to treat tachycardic arrhythmia. Some small studies suggest that prior oral β-blocker use results in a less effective response to intravenous β-blockers. Methods: This study investigated whether prior chronic oral β-blocker (Lβ) or no prior chronic oral β-blocker (L-) intake influences the response to intravenous push-dose Landiolol in intensive care patients with acute tachycardic arrhythmia. Results: The effects in 30 patients (67 [55-72] years) were analyzed, 10 (33.3%) with and 20 (66.7%) without prior oral β-blocker therapy. Arrhythmias were diagnosed as tachycardic atrial fibrillation in 14 patients and regular, non-fluid-dependent, supraventricular tachycardia in 16 cases. Successful heart rate control (Lβ 4 vs. L- 7, p = 1.00) and rhythm control (Lβ 3 vs. L- 6, p = 1.00) did not significantly differ between the two groups. Both groups showed a significant decrease in heart rate when comparing before and after the bolus administration, without significant differences between the two groups (Lβ -26/min vs. L- -33/min, p = 0.528). Oral β-blocker therapy also did not influence the change in mean arterial blood pressure after Landiolol bolus administration (Lβ -5 mmHg vs. L- -4 mmHg, p = 0.761). Conclusions: A prior chronic intake of β-blockers neither affected the effectiveness of push-dose Landiolol in heart rate or rhythm control nor impacted the difference in heart rate or mean arterial blood pressure before and after the Landiolol boli.
Keyphrases
- heart rate
- blood pressure
- heart rate variability
- catheter ablation
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- atrial fibrillation
- end stage renal disease
- hypertensive patients
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- high dose
- randomized controlled trial
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- heart failure
- left atrial
- clinical trial
- study protocol
- weight gain
- body mass index
- drug induced
- coronary artery disease
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- bone marrow
- weight loss
- congenital heart disease
- direct oral anticoagulants