1974
DOI: 10.1016/0002-8703(74)90171-9
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A study of the antiarrhythmic action of certain beta-blocking agents

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1976
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Cited by 23 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…No special effort was made at this stage to optimize the absorption of EO-122, but it has been demonstrated that more than 80% of the ingested dose could be accounted for in the circulation of healthy dogs. But whereas the antiarrhythmic effect of a 100 mg/kg oral dose of tocainide was shown to last 0.25 to 5 hours when treatment was given 48 hours postligation, that of an oral dose of EO-122 in the range of [15][16][17][18][19][20] mg/kg lasted about 20 minutes when treatment was given 24 hours after ligation and 2 hours when given 48 hours postligation. Thus the relatively short t1f2 of EO-122 with respect to tocainide is not necessarily a shortcoming when oral medication is called for, since it appears to be partly compensated for by the higher potency of EO-22.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…No special effort was made at this stage to optimize the absorption of EO-122, but it has been demonstrated that more than 80% of the ingested dose could be accounted for in the circulation of healthy dogs. But whereas the antiarrhythmic effect of a 100 mg/kg oral dose of tocainide was shown to last 0.25 to 5 hours when treatment was given 48 hours postligation, that of an oral dose of EO-122 in the range of [15][16][17][18][19][20] mg/kg lasted about 20 minutes when treatment was given 24 hours after ligation and 2 hours when given 48 hours postligation. Thus the relatively short t1f2 of EO-122 with respect to tocainide is not necessarily a shortcoming when oral medication is called for, since it appears to be partly compensated for by the higher potency of EO-22.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the latter effect seemed to be the primary cause of death. At therapeutic doses in healthy and arrhythmic dogs, no depression of cardiac function could be observed, in one case where an intravenous dose of 5 mg/kg of the drug was intentionally injected within a very short time; a transient broadening of the QRS complex followed, lasting for about 15 minutes. Remarkably, nembutal-anesthetized cats seemed to be more vulnerable to the effect of EO-122 because ECG changes already appeared after a cumulative IV dose of 3 mg/kg.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Surgical or pharmacological procedures that decrease sympathetic nerve function also decrease digitalis toxicity. Even though many groups of drugs which decrease sympathetic tone, like fl-adrenoceptor antagonists (Kelliher & Roberts, 1974;Hernandez & Serrano, 1982;, ganglion blocking agents (Gillis et al, 1975), drugs interfering with catecholamine storage and release Saito et al, 1974) were studied and found effective against cardiac arrhythmias induced by various cardiac glycosides, there has been no serious attempt to study the effect of a2-adrenoceptor agonists against digitalis-induced cardiotoxic effects. Numerous studies have proposed that clonidine reduces blood pressure by a reduction in sympathetic tone through activation of central a2-adrenoceptors (Schmitt, 1977;Isaac, 1980;Van Zwieten & Timmermans, 1983).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%