Indication |
For the treatment of documented ventricular arrhythmias, such as
sustained ventricular tachycardia, ventricular pre-excitation and
cardiac dysrhythmias. It is a Class Ia antiarrhythmic drug. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Disopyramide is an antiarrhythmic drug indicated for the
treatment of documented ventricular arrhythmias, such as sustained
ventricular tachycardia that are life-threatening. In man, Disopyramide
at therapeutic plasma levels shortens the sinus node recovery time,
lengthens the effective refractory period of the atrium, and has a
minimal effect on the effective refractory period of the AV node. Little
effect has been shown on AV-nodal and His-Purkinje conduction times or
QRS duration. However, prolongation of conduction in accessory pathways
occurs. |
Mechanism of action |
Disopyramide is a Type 1A antiarrhythmic drug (ie, similar to
procainamide and quinidine). It inhibits the fast sodium channels. In
animal studies Disopyramide decreases the rate of diastolic
depolarization (phase 4) in cells with augmented automaticity, decreases
the upstroke velocity (phase 0) and increases the action potential
duration of normal cardiac cells, decreases the disparity in
refractoriness between infarcted and adjacent normally perfused
myocardium, and has no effect on alpha- or beta-adrenergic receptors. |
Absorption |
Nearly complete |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
50%-65% |
Metabolism |
Hepatic |
Route of elimination |
In healthy men, about 50% of a given dose of disopyramide is
excreted in the urine as the unchanged drug, about 20% as the
mono-N-dealkylated metabolite and 10% as the other metabolites. |
Half life |
6.7 hours (range 4-10 hours) |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
LD50=580 mg/kg in rats |