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  • Title: Randomized double-blind study of intravenous tocainide versus lidocaine for suppression of ventricular arrhythmias after cardiac surgery.
    Author: Manolis AS, Smith E, Payne D, Rastegar H, Cleveland R, Estes NA.
    Journal: Clin Cardiol; 1990 Mar; 13(3):177-81. PubMed ID: 2108835.
    Abstract:
    To compare the therapeutic efficacy and safety of intravenous tocainide with that of intravenous lidocaine in patients with ventricular arrhythmias after cardiac surgery, 25 patients were randomized to either agent in a double-blind manner. Tocainide was given in 16 patients as a 250 mg bolus followed by a loading infusion of 500 mg over 15 minutes and a maintenance infusion of 33.3 mg/min. Lidocaine was administered in 9 patients as a 100 mg bolus followed by a loading infusion of 60 mg over 15 minutes and a maintenance infusion of 1.4 mg/min. Therapy was continued for 24 hours in initially responding patients. With analysis of 24-h taped electrocardiograms it was found that single premature ventricular complexes (PVCs) were suppressed by tocainide by more than 80% in 94% of patients and by lidocaine in 75% of patients (p = NS). Couplets and ventricular tachycardia events were eliminated in all patients by either drug. Multiform PVCs were abolished in 94% of the patients after tocainide and in 75% after lidocaine (p = NS). Average overall success over the 24 hours with more than 80% suppression of single PVCs and simultaneous elimination of higher forms of arrhythmia was 71% with tocainide and 59% with lidocaine (p = NS). Adverse effects were negligible, with only one patient in the lidocaine group developing diaphoresis without necessitating termination of therapy. Treatment rapidly produced and then maintained blood levels of 4-10 mg/l for tocainide and 1-4 mg/l for lidocaine. We conclude that intravenous tocainide is well tolerated and has comparable efficacy to lidocaine in the acute therapy of postcardiac surgery ventricular arrhythmias.
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