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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Combination of digoxin and diltiazem controls fast heart rate in dogs

By Gelzer, A R M et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2009·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Combination therapy with digoxin and diltiazem controls ventricular rate in chronic atrial fibrillation in dogs better than digoxin or diltiazem monotherapy: a randomized crossover study in 18 dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old mixed-breed dog with advanced heart disease was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation (AF) and had a high heart rate averaging over 140 beats per minute. The dog was treated with either digoxin, diltiazem, or a combination of both medications. The combination therapy was found to be the most effective, reducing the heart rate to an average of 126 beats per minute and keeping it below 140 beats for 85% of the time. This treatment helped improve the dog's condition better than using either medication alone.

People also search for: dog atrial fibrillation treatment · heart rate control in dogs · digoxin diltiazem combination therapy

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) with excessively high ventricular rates (VR) occurs in dogs with advanced heart disease. Rate control improves clinical signs in these patients. Optimal drug therapy and target VR remain poorly defined. HYPOTHESIS: Digoxin-diltiazem combination therapy reduces VR more than either drug alone in dogs with high VR AF. ANIMALS: Eighteen client-owned dogs (>15 kg) with advanced heart disease, AF, and average VR on 24-hour Holter > 140 beats per minute (bpm). METHODS: After baseline Holter recording, dogs were randomized to digoxin or diltiazem monotherapy, or combination therapy. Repeat Holter evaluation was obtained after 2 weeks; dogs were then crossed over to the other arm (monotherapy or combination therapy) for 2 weeks and a third Holter was acquired. Twenty-four hour average VR, absolute and relative VR changes from baseline, and percent time spent within prespecified VR ranges (>140, 100-140, and <100 bpm) were compared. Correlations between serum drug concentrations and VR were examined. RESULTS: Digoxin (median, 164 bpm) and diltiazem (median, 158 bpm) decreased VR from baseline (median, 194 bpm) less than the digoxin-diltiazem combination (median, 126 bpm) (P < .008 for each comparison). With digoxin-diltiazem, VR remained <140 bpm for 85% of the recording period, but remained >140 bpm for 88% of the recording period with either monotherapy. Serum drug concentrations did not correlate with VR. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: At the dosages used in this study, digoxin-diltiazem combination therapy provided a greater rate control than either drug alone in dogs with AF.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19645836/