Bethge K P, Andresen D, Boissel J P, von Leitner E R, Peyrieux J C, Schröder R, Tietze U
J Am Coll Cardiol. 1985 Nov;6(5):963-72. doi: 10.1016/s0735-1097(85)80295-3.
In 736 patients, 24 hour electrocardiographic recordings were performed 14 to 36 days after acute myocardial infarction before the start of randomized treatment with 320 mg of slow release oxprenolol (n = 358) or placebo (n = 378). Follow-up 24 hour electrocardiographic recordings were obtained 5 to 12 days (median 10) and 3, 6 and 12 months after the first administration of the study medication. Oxprenolol-treated patients had a significantly lower daytime heart rate as compared with the placebo group, whereas no difference was found at night. At baseline, 22.1% of the patients allocated to oxprenolol treatment and 29.6% of the placebo group had more than 30 ventricular extrasystoles in 1 hour at least once during 24 hour monitoring; multiform ventricular extrasystoles were present in 58.4 and 62.7%, ventricular couplets in 29.6 and 33.9% and ventricular tachycardia (3 or more consecutive ventricular extrasystoles) in 21.5 and 20.9% of the oxprenolol-treated and placebo-treated patients, respectively. During the 1 year follow-up period, the prevalence of these arrhythmias did not change significantly in either treatment group. There was a trend toward a reduction in the daytime frequency of ventricular couplets in the oxprenolol group. After 3 and 6 months, only multiform ventricular extrasystoles were significantly less frequent in the oxprenolol group than in the placebo group (47.4 and 42.7% versus 59.7 and 57.9%, respectively). Twelve months after the acute event, however, multiform ventricular extrasystole frequency was the same in both groups of patients (52.1 versus 51.0%, respectively). Thus, oxprenolol had a weak suppressant effect on ventricular tachyarrhythmias in survivors of myocardial infarction.