| Literature DB >> 29142794 |
Waseem Amjad1, Waqas Qureshi2, Ali Farooq3, Umair Sohail4, Salma Khatoon1, Sarah Pervaiz5, Pratyusha Narra6, Syeda M Hasan5, Farman Ali7, Aman Ullah8, Steven Guttmann9.
Abstract
Antiarrhythmic drugs are commonly prescribed cardiac drugs. Due to their receptor mimicry with several of the gastrointestinal tract receptors, they can frequently lead to gastrointestinal side effects. These side effects are the most common reasons for discontinuation of these drugs by the patients. Knowledge of these side effects is important for clinicians that manage antiarrhythmic drugs. This review focuses on the gastrointestinal side effects of these drugs and provides a detailed up-to-date literature review of the side effects of these drugs. The review provides case reports reported in the literature as well as possible mechanisms that lead to gastrointestinal side effects.Entities:
Keywords: antiarrhythmic drugs; cardiac drugs; cardiac pharmacology; drug side effects; gastrointestinal side effects
Year: 2017 PMID: 29142794 PMCID: PMC5669531 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.1646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Classification of Antiarrhythmic Medications
Modified from Kowey, et al. [1]
| Classes | Membrane Effect | Drugs |
| Class 1a | Sodium channel block; intermediate kinetics, and potassium channel block | Quinidine, procainamide hydrochloride, disopyramide |
| Class 1b | Sodium channel block; rapid kinetics | Lidocaine, tocainide, mexiletine hydrochloride, phenytoin |
| Class 1c | Sodium channel block with slow kinetics | Flecainide and propafenone |
| Class 2 | Beta-receptor blocker | Propranolol, metoprolol, esmolol, acebutolol, atenolol |
| Class 3 | Potassium channel blocker, slow sodium channel facilitation | Procainamide, sotalol, dronedarone, dofetilide |
| Class 4 | Calcium channel blocker | Verapamil and diltiazem |
| Digitalis | Sodium potassium ATPase inhibition | Digoxin, digitoxin |
| Adenosine | Inhibit cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) mediated calcium influx | Adenosine |
Comparison of Cases of Disopyramide-induced Hepatotoxicity
| References | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptom, signs and labs | Duration of drug use | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Scheinman, et al. [ | 62/Male | Anxiety, dyspnea, abdomen pain, elevated aspartate aminotransferase, and lactate dehydrogenase | One day | Hepatic necrosis with congestion on biopsy, disopyramide was discontinued and liver enzymes and symptoms improved on day six. | Disopyramide was restarted but the patient again had a recurrence of anxiety and dyspnea, it was discontinued. Liver enzymes did not elevate. Antiarrhythmic was changed to procainamide. |
|
Scheinman, et al. [ | 61/Male | Hypotension, chest pain, 1+ edema lower extremity, bilateral lung bases rales, hepatomegaly. Aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and lactate dehydrogenase were elevated | One day | Symptoms improved with diuresis and liver enzymes normalized. | Nausea, dyspnea, and hypotension developed one day after readministration of disopyramide. Liver enzymes peaked; the drug was switched to procainamide and liver enzymes normalized in few days. |
|
Doody [ | 55/Female | Elevated liver enzymes and disseminated intravascular coagulation (prolonged prothrombin time, elevated fibrin split products) | Unknown | Both liver enzymes and liver functions improved 14 days after discontinuation of therapy. | No |
|
Barkins, et al. [ | Unknown | Jaundice and abnormal liver enzymes | One week | Prompt clinical resolution on discontinuation of the drug. | No |
Summary and Comparison of a Few Cases of Quinidine-induced Hepatotoxicity
| References | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, signs and labs | Duration of Drug Use | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Guharoy, et al. [ | 62/Male | Diarrhea, nausea, fever, palpitations, elevated aspartate aminotransferase, and alanine aminotransferase | Two weeks | Symptoms resolved in 42 hours, liver enzymes started decreasing gradually and normalized on day 12. | No |
|
Bramlet, et al. [ | Unknown | Fever, urticaria, and mild thrombocytopenia | Unknown | Histology showed granulomatous hepatitis. Symptoms resolved with discontinuation of the drug. | Symptoms appeared three days after readministration |
|
Handler, et al. [ | 72/Female | Anorexia, weight loss, elevated aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, and lactate dehydrogenase | 16 months | Active hepatitis on liver biopsy, liver functions normalized after discontinuation of the drug. | Re-challenge with the drug caused elevation of liver enzymes and lactate dehydrogenase |
|
Hogan, et al. [ | 85/Male | Jaundice and vomiting, elevated aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase, and total bilirubin | 8 days | Biopsy showed centrilobular cholestasis and granulomatous hepatitis. Quinidine stopped on day 10 and liver functions started improving. | No |
Comparison of Cases of Phenytoin-induced Hepatotoxicity
| References | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, signs and labs | Duration of Drug Use | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Roy, et al. [ | 52/Female | Elevated serum aminotransferases | 11 years | Liver biopsy showed chronic persistent hepatitis. Liver functions improved after discontinuation of the drug. | Etiology confirmed by rechallenge |
|
Brackett and Bloch [ | 55/Female | Elevated liver enzymes | Unknown | Liver enzymes improved after discontinuation of acetaminophen. Phenytoin predisposed acetaminophen toxicity | Phenytoin continued. |
|
Suchin, et al. [ | 22/Male | Hepatic encephalopathy, acute renal failure, elevated liver enzymes | Unknown | Hemodialysis initiated and liver transplantation done, explant showed hepatic necrosis. Phenytoin worsened the acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity | Unknown |
|
Altuntas, et al. [ | 47/Female | Exfoliative dermatitis, increase in liver enzymes with a cholestatic pattern, eosinophilia | 25 days | Liver biopsy consistent with drug-induced hepatitis; liver functions improved three weeks after discontinuation of phenytoin | No |
Comparison of beta blocker hepatotoxicity cases
| Reference | Drug | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, signs and labs | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Kootte, et al. [ | Sotalol | 68/Female | Elevated Liver enzymes | Liver functions Normalized in five months after discontinuation of the drug. | Unknown |
|
Hagmeyer and Stein [ | Carvedilol | 40/Male | Pruritis, elevated serum transaminases | Carvedilol was discontinued, symptoms improved with hydroxyzine. The drug was discontinued and liver enzymes improved after three weeks. | One year later, the patient was started on metoprolol and developed pruritus in 10 days and the drug was stopped. Liver enzymes remained normal. |
|
Dumortier, et al. [ | Atenolol | 57/Female | Asthenia and elevated liver enzymes | Liver biopsy showed portal and centrilobular inflammation. After receiving steroids, liver function tests improved but were still elevated; repeat biopsy showed necrosis in centrilobular areas with pigmented macrophages. Liver function tests normalized two months after discontinuation of atenolol. Control liver biopsy in seven months showed disappearance of centrilobular lesions. | No |
Comparison of a Few Case Reports of Amiodarone-induced Hepatitis in the Literature
| References | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, Signs and Labs | Duration | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Singhal, et al. [ | 79/Male | Coffee ground emesis, lethargy, ascites, spider nevi, gynecomastia, palmar erythema | 33 months | Cirrhosis and extensive fibrosis confirmed on liver biopsy. Amiodarone was discontinued. The patient developed renal failure, heart failure, hepatic encephalopathy and died in three months. | No |
|
Rizzioli, et al. [ | 79/Female | Liver function tests increased acutely after the start of amiodarone infusion | One day | Amiodarone infusion was stopped, transaminases started to decrease. Progressive congestive heart failure led to death on same admission. | No |
|
Kang, et al. [ | 75/Male | Nausea, vomiting, and polyneuropathy for three months and mildly elevated liver enzymes | 17.8 months | Liver biopsy showed microvesicular steatosis, foam cells, and Mallory bodies. Amiodarone was discontinued; liver enzymes improved on day three and symptoms slowly improved. | No |
|
Lahbabi, et al. [ | 29/Female | Significantly elevated enzymes acutely after starting amiodarone infusion | 24 hours | Amiodarone infusion was stopped and replaced by oral amiodarone. Liver functions improved gradually. | Oral amiodarone continued; liver function tests after two months were normal |
|
Fonesca, et al. [ | 88/Male | Significantly elevated liver enzymes after start of amiodarone infusion with thrombocytopenia and acute kidney injury | 18 hours | Amiodarone infusion was stopped; liver and renal functions gradually normalized. | Oral amiodarone was restarted on day four at lower dose and liver functions were normal on follow-up |
|
Chen and Wu [ | Unknown | Acutely elevated liver enzymes after starting amiodarone infusion | 24 hours | Amiodarone infusion was stopped; liver enzymes normalized. | Oral amiodarone was started on lower dose and hepatotoxicity did not occur on follow-up |
Odds Ratio with Confidence Interval of 95% for Malignant Neoplasm of the Liver and Intrahepatic Bile Ducts (MNLIHD) Associated with Amiodarone and Other Antiarrhythmics
Modified from Yun-Ping, et al. [36]
| Medications | MNLIHD odds ratio (confidence interval 95%) |
| Amiodarone | 1.6 (1.45 - 1.77) |
| Mexiletine | 1.07 (0.98 - 1.18) |
| Propafenone | 0.97 (0.85 - 1.11) |
| Quinidine | 1.32 (0.91 - 1.93) |
| Procainamide | 0.97 (0.71 - 1.33) |
Amiodarone-associated Acute Pancreatitis
Modified from Lai, et al. [37]
| Amiodarone use | Acute pancreatitis adjusted odds ratio (confidence interval 95%) |
| Current Use | 5.21 (3.22 - 8.43) |
| Recent Use | 1.18 (0.32 - 4.35) |
| Past Use | 1.42 (0.99 - 2.03) |
Summary and Comparison of Cases of Amiodarone-induced Pancreatitis
| References | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, signs and labs | Duration | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Bosch and Bernadich [ | 46/Female | Nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, elevated lipase | Four days | Intravenous fluids were given; symptoms resolved after discontinuation of the drug. Procainamide was started. | Procainamide was stopped and amiodarone was started at low dose 100 mg per day. After three days, the patient had recurrence of symptoms with elevated amylase and lipase. Amiodarone was stopped and procainamide was restarted. |
|
Famularo, et al. [ | 80/Male | Epigastric pain, vomiting, distended abdomen, elevated amylase, and lipase | Five days | Amiodarone dose was reduced to 200 mg daily from loading dose; symptoms and serum lipase levels improved after three days. | Rechallenge with a high dose of amiodarone was not performed and continued with 200 mg. |
|
Chen, et al. [ | 66/Female | Epigastic pain, loss of appetite, and elevated lipase | Three months | Abdominal pain persisted even after three weeks of conservative management. All causes ruled out. Amiodarone was substituted with propafenone; symptoms resolved and lipase gradually trended down | No |
Summary of Cases of Dronedarone-induced Hepatotoxicity
ICU: intensive care unit
| Reference | Age (Years)/ Sex | Symptoms, Signs and Labs | Duration | Outcome | |
| Repeat Exposure | |||||
|
Del Pozo Ruis, et al. [ | 75/Male | Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, elevated liver enzymes | Four days | Patient developed fulminant liver failure, dronedarone was discontinued. Liver functions improved after seven days of discontinuation and ICU monitoring | No |
|
Jahn, et al. [ | 69/Female | Elevated liver enzymes | Unknown | Acute liver failure resolved after discontinuation of the drug. | Unknown |
|
Rizkallah, et al. [ | 85/Male | Nausea and elevated liver enzymes | One day | Drug was discontinued after three doses; the patient developed multiorgan failure and died on day 8. | No |