Verapamil increases the serum-digoxin concentration (SDC) in digoxin treated normals due to a compromised renal and extrarenal clearance. In chronic hemodialysis patients (CHD-patients) treated with digoxin where the renal elimination is diminished, verapamil has been shown to cause substantial increases of SDC with risk of digoxin intoxication. The effect of verapamil treatment on SDC in 8 nearly anephric (Uvol less than 1 l/d) CHD-patients on digoxin treatment was assessed. The patients were continuously treated with verapamil for two periods of two weeks at two dosage levels, 120 mg/d and 240 mg/d, whereafter verapamil was withdrawn. SDC and serum-verapamil were measured weekly. The SDC increased from 1.1 mmol/l to 1.7 mmol/l (p less than 0.05, N = 7) during the first two weeks. Increasing the dose of verapamil to 240 mg/d did not cause a further increment in SDC; on the contrary, the mean SDC decreased. The SDC increments varied between 0 and 200% of baseline values. We conclude that verapamil treatment decreases digoxin clearance in CHD-patients and that the influence of verapamil on SDC in CHD-patients shows great interindividual variation with no close dose dependency and decreases to pretreatment level in 2-3 weeks.
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