[Mahajan A, et al. Antiarrhythmic Drugs. 2011;5a] Class IC drugs block cardiac sodium channels and have no effect on the action potential. Class IC drugs are commonly used to maintain sinus rhythm ...
Antiarrhythmic drugs (AADs) are often used after ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF); the drugs employed vary, but most common are the drugs that were unsuccessful prior to ablation since it ...
However, the efficacy of antiarrhythmic agents has not been rigorously evaluated in patients with ARVC, and limited data are available to support such use of these drugs. The Multidisciplinary ...
There are four main types of these medications: In addition to use of an antiarrhythmic medication, some patients may also require an electrical cardioversion to restore normal rhythm or a catheter ...
Antiarrhythmic drugs are categorized into four main classes (Class I, II, III, and IV) based on the Vaughan-Williams ...
This generalization becomes increasingly relevant with age and should inform any approaches to diagnosis, investigation, and management, including the choice of antiarrhythmic drugs. Indeed ...
Large multicentre randomised trials have demonstrated that a rhythm control strategy (using antiarrhythmic drugs and direct current (DC) cardioversion) has no morbidity or mortality advantage over ...
You will be redirected to our submission process. The effective treatment of arrhythmias using drug therapy has long posed a significant challenge. Many antiarrhythmic drugs suffer from uncertain ...
The results will support the company’s application for expanded labeling of its popular Farapulse pulsed field ablation system in a larger group of patients with atrial fibrillation.
We provide electrocardiograms, pulmonary function tests, chest X-rays and other appropriate lab tests. Our pharmacists have specialized training in antiarrhythmic medication management.