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Journal of the American College of Nutrition, Vol 11, Issue 4 405-409, Copyright © 1992 by American College of Nutrition


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Electrophysiologic effects of magnesium sulfate infusion in patients with cardiac conduction defects

F. Perticone, R. Ceravolo, R. Costa and P. L. Mattioli
Department of Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica, Medical School, University of Reggio, Catanzaro, Calabria, Italy.

We report the electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic effects of magnesium (Mg) sulfate infusion in 25 normomagnesemic patients (16 men and 9 women, aged 22-74 years; mean +/- SD, 60.4 +/- 11.9) with different cardiac conduction impairments. Ten patients had chronic ischemic heart disease, two had idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, two had hypertensive heart disease, three had valvular heart disease, five had sclerodegenerative heart disease and three had no clinical evidence of cardiac disease. Five patients had trifascicular block [first degree atrioventricular (A-V) block+right bundle branch block (RBBB)+left anterior hemiblock (LAH)], eight had bifascicular block (6 RBBB+LAH, 2 first degree A-V block+RBBB), four had isolated first degree A-V block and eight had bundle branch block [5 RBBB, 3 left bundle branch block (LBBB)]. Before and during Mg infusion (50 mg/min/60 min) we evaluated the A-V (P-R), intraatrial (P-A), suprahisian (A-H), infrahisian (H-V) conduction times, electrical ventricular systole (Q-T), Q-T index (Q-Tc) intraventricular conduction time (QRS) and heart rate. At the end of infusion the P-R, P-A, A-H, H-V increased from 215.4 +/- 36.6, 33.6 +/- 9.1, 112.8 +/- 37.3, 69.0 +/- 12.8 ms to 217.6 +/- 37.1 (p less than 0.002), 33.8 +/- 9.4 (NS), 114.2 +/- 38.1 (p less than 0.005), 69.6 +/- 13.3 (NS) ms. QRS complex did not change (125 +/- 16.9 ms).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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