1. Effect of nisoldipine on hemodynamic responses to defibrillation
- Author
-
Kieso, Robert A., Fox-Eastham, Karen, and Kerber, Richard E.
- Subjects
Ventricular fibrillation -- Care and treatment ,Ventricular fibrillation -- Models ,Electric countershock -- Complications ,Health - Abstract
In a number of pathological states, the normal pattern of contraction of the heart muscle may be disrupted; a very severe form of this, in which individual fibers of the ventricle (the pumping chamber) contract in an uncoordinated and ineffectual manner, is known as ventricular fibrillation. This condition must be reversed immediately, or death follows. The method of choice for terminating ventricular fibrillation is electrical defibrillation, in which a high voltage shock is applied to the chest wall, synchronizing the contraction of the cardiac muscle fibers, and causing a reversion to normal cardiac rhythm. A frequent consequence of electrical defibrillation is a reflexive hypertension (high blood pressure) that can be damaging to patients in precarious cardiovascular status. It has been shown that the administration of drugs known as calcium channel blockers can moderate this defibrillation-induced hypertension; the calcium channel blockers that have been tested thus far have the unwanted side effect of reducing the effectiveness of the defibrillation procedure. Nisoldipine, a calcium channel blocker with potent antihypertensive and vessel-dilating effects has not been extensively characterized with respect to its effects on either defibrillation-induced hypertension or the effectiveness of defibrillation. A study was carried out using an animal model of ventricular fibrillation (electrically-induced fibrillation in anesthetized mongrel dogs). Both the energy level required to defibrillate the heart and the degree of hypertension following defibrillation were studied before and after the administration of nisoldipine at a dose sufficient to lower blood pressure by 10 and 20 percent. Nisoldipine administration significantly lowered the post-defibrillation hypertension, but had no effect on the energy level required to defibrillate the heart. This drug may have a beneficial effect in patients requiring defibrillation. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
- Published
- 1991