Korean Circ J.  2000 Mar;30(3):295-302. 10.4070/kcj.2000.30.3.295.

A Prospective Study of Reperfusion Arrhythmias in Primary Coronary Angioplasty for Acute Myocardial Infarction

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Arrhythmia is known to be a major cause of death in acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Reperfusion arrhythmias (RA) may also occur during angioplasty or thrombolysis. As yet, the clinical significances of RA and angiographic characteristics of the patients who develop RA during primary angioplasty and stenting are not clearly defined.
METHODS
The study group consisted of 60 patients treated with primary angioplasty or stenting for AMI (angioplasty 13, stenting 47 patients). The patients were classified into 2 groups according to RA [RA (-) N=36/RA(+) N=24]: demographic and angiographic characteristics including time to reperfusion and incidence of pre-infarct angina were analyzed.
RESULTS
The RA occurred in 40% of patients undergoing primary angioplasty or stenting (24/60 patients). The minor arrhythmias were more common after reperfusion (transient bradycardia 14, accelerated idioventricular rhythm 11, premature ventricular contraction 4 cases): major arrhythmias were uncommon (ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation 5, asystole 1 case). In the two groups, baseline clinical characteristics were similar except for pain to reperfusion time [RA (-): RA (+)=490.8+/-291.7: 252.9+/-109.2 minutes, P=0.001]. There was a trend toward a greater incidence of RA in the right coronary infarct-related artery [RA (-): RA (+)=16.7: 41.7%, P=NS]. The RA occurred in totally occluded artery (TIMI 0) with a giant thrombus and first ballooning in 19/24 patients (79.2%). The RA disappeared with conservative managements including pacemaker insertion and cardiopulmonary resuscitation and there were no differences in major adverse cardiac events in the two groups during follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS
These findings suggest that the RA are frequent events during primary angioplasty but unrelated to clinical and angiographic characteristics except for reperfusion time and do not influence short-term prognosis in AMI.

Keyword

Acute myocardial infarction; Primary angioplasty; Reperfusion arrhythmia

MeSH Terms

Accelerated Idioventricular Rhythm
Angioplasty*
Arrhythmias, Cardiac*
Arteries
Bradycardia
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Cause of Death
Follow-Up Studies
Heart Arrest
Humans
Incidence
Myocardial Infarction*
Prognosis
Prospective Studies*
Reperfusion*
Stents
Thrombosis
Ventricular Premature Complexes
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