Publication | Closed Access
Benign symptomatic premature ventricular complexes: short- and long-term efficacy of antiarrhythmic drugs and radiofrequency ablation.
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
The most efficacious agent was propafenone, followed by verapamil, and then metoprolol [35 (42%), 13 (15%) and eight (10%) responders, respectively, p < 0.01 vs propafenone]. Only responders to drug treatment had a significant reduction in symptom severity (Visual Analogue Scale score: 6.2 ± 1.4 vs 2.7 ± 2.0, p < 0.001). After AAD, 50 (60%) patients underwent RFCA. During long-term follow-up (48 ± 10 months), RFCA (mean 1.2 procedures/patient) was effective in 44/50 (88%) patients. Of the 34 remaining patients, 21 remained on effective AAD, 6 patients remained on ineffective AAD, and 7 patients were taken off AADs therapy due to spontaneous remission of PVCs or a decrease in symptom severity. conclusions: Short-term treatment with propafenone was more effective than verapamil or metoprolol in suppressing idiopathic PVCs. However, optimal benefit was achieved with RFCA, which was effective and safe during long-term follow-up.
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