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Title: Cardiac effects of treatment with quinidine and digoxin, alone and in combination. Author: Schenck-Gustafsson K, Jogestrand T, Brodin LA, Nordlander R, Dahlqvist R. Journal: Am J Cardiol; 1983 Mar 01; 51(5):777-82. PubMed ID: 6829437. Abstract: Systolic time intervals (QS2-I and LVET-I) and echocardiographically determined ejection fraction and velocity of circumferential fiber shortening were recorded in 10 healthy volunteers as measures of inotropic effect during maintenance treatment with 4 consecutive drug regimens: (1) quinidine, 1,200 mg/day; (2) digoxin, average dose 0.31 mg/day; (3) the combination of (1) and (2); and (4) digoxin alone (average dose 0.65 mg/day) to provide the same steady-state serum concentration of digoxin as during the period with combination of digoxin and quinidine. The steady-state serum concentration of digoxin during the low-dose regimen increased from 0.72 +/- 0.15 (mean +/- standard deviation [SD]) to 1.63 +/- 0.28 nmol/liter when quinidine was added. With the high dose of digoxin alone, the serum digoxin level reached 1.68 +/- 0.50 nmol/liter. Skeletal muscle digoxin concentrations during these periods were 27.7 +/- 8.3, 48.7 +/- 16.2, and 51.6 +/- 23.6 nmol/kg of dry weight, respectively. The skeletal muscle to serum concentration ratio of digoxin decreased significantly during quinidine treatment. Systolic time intervals were significantly prolonged by quinidine alone and shortened by digoxin alone, the latter effect being dose-dependent. Subtracting the effect of quinidine itself, the induced increase in digoxin level caused a significant increase in inotropic effect. When these corrected values were compared with those attained during the period with the same steady-state digoxin concentration but in the absence of quinidine, no significant differences were found. Echocardiographically measured ejection fraction and velocity of circumferential fiber shortening showed trends for similar drug effects, as did the systolic time intervals. This study, performed under steady-state conditions, demonstrates that the quinidine-induced increase in steady-state serum digoxin concentration will, with due consideration to quinidine's own pharmacodynamic properties, be accompanied by increased cardiac effects. This indicates that quinidine is not interfering with active receptor sites in the heart for digoxin.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]