Procainamide
1. INTRODUCTION
Procainamide is a Class IA antiarrhythmic (Vaughan-Williams classification) used for:
- Atrial arrhythmias
- Ventricular arrhythmias
- Particularly useful in wide-complex tachycardia of uncertain origin
Acts by blocking fast sodium channels + prolonging repolarization
2. MECHANISM OF ACTION
Primary action:
- Blocks fast Na⁺ channels → slows phase 0 depolarization
- ↓ Conduction velocity in atria, ventricles, His-Purkinje system
Secondary actions:
- Blocks K⁺ channels → prolongs repolarization
- ↑ Action potential duration (APD)
- ↑ Effective refractory period (ERP)
Electrophysiological Effects
|
Parameter |
Effect |
|
PR interval |
↑ |
|
QRS duration |
↑ |
|
QT interval |
↑ |
|
Conduction velocity |
↓ |
|
Automaticity |
↓ |
Key risk: QT prolongation → torsades de pointes
3. PHARMACOKINETICS
|
Parameter |
Details |
|
Route |
IV (CCM), oral |
|
Metabolism |
Hepatic → N-acetylprocainamide (NAPA) |
|
Active metabolite |
NAPA (Class III effect) |
|
Excretion |
Renal |
Clinical Implication:
- Renal failure → accumulation of NAPA → torsades risk
- Slow acetylators → more procainamide toxicity
4. INDICATIONS
1. Stable Wide-Complex Tachycardia
- Monomorphic VT
- Unknown origin (VT vs SVT with aberrancy)
Recommended in American Heart Association ACLS guidelines
2. Atrial Arrhythmias
- Atrial fibrillation (especially with accessory pathway)
- Atrial flutter
3. WPW Syndrome
- AF with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
- Preferred drug (along with ibutilide)
Avoid AV nodal blockers (adenosine, beta-blockers)
4. Ventricular Arrhythmias
- Sustained VT (hemodynamically stable)
- Alternative to amiodarone
5. CONTRAINDICATIONS
Absolute:
- Prolonged QT interval
- Torsades de pointes history
- Complete heart block (without pacing)
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
Relative:
- Heart failure
- Renal failure
- Electrolyte imbalance (↓K⁺, ↓Mg²⁺)
6. DOSING IN ICU
IV Loading Dose:
- 15–18 mg/kg IV infusion
- Rate: 20–50 mg/min
Stop if:
- QRS ↑ by 50%
- Hypotension develops
- Arrhythmia suppressed
- Max dose reached
Maintenance Infusion:
- 1–4 mg/min IV infusion
Dose Adjustments:
|
Condition |
Adjustment |
|
Renal failure |
↓ dose (NAPA accumulation) |
|
Heart failure |
Slower infusion |
|
Elderly |
Lower dose |
7. ADVERSE EFFECTS
Cardiac:
- QT prolongation → torsades de pointes
- Hypotension (dose-dependent)
- AV block
Non-cardiac:
1. Drug-induced lupus
- Arthralgia
- Fever
- Serositis
- Anti-histone antibodies
2. CNS:
- Confusion
- Psychosis (rare)
3. Hematological:
- Agranulocytosis (rare but severe)
8. TOXICITY & MANAGEMENT
Features:
- QRS widening
- QT prolongation
- Ventricular arrhythmias
Management:
|
Problem |
Treatment |
|
Torsades |
MgSO₄ IV |
|
QRS widening |
Sodium bicarbonate |
|
Severe toxicity |
Stop drug |
|
Hemodynamic instability |
DC cardioversion |
9. SPECIAL ICU SCENARIOS
1. Wide Complex Tachycardia (Stable)
- Procainamide preferred over amiodarone (less hypotension in some studies)
2. WPW + AF
- Drug of choice
- Avoid AV nodal blockers → risk of VF
3. Structural Heart Disease
- Use cautiously
- Amiodarone often preferred
10. GUIDELINE PEARLS
- From American Heart Association ACLS:
- Stable monomorphic VT → procainamide infusion is recommended
- Avoid if:
- Prolonged QT
- CHF with low EF
- WPW with AF → procainamide first-line
