Roworth Spurrell
Guy's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Roworth Spurrell.
Postgraduate Medical Journal | 1974
Dennis M Krikler; Roworth Spurrell
Verapamil is a novel antiarrhythmic agent which appears to act as a calcium-ion antagonist, blocking calcium transport across the myocardial cell membrane. It was given intravenously, in a dose of 10 mg, to thirty-two patients suffering from paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, and sinus rhythm was achieved promptly in all. Identical results were obtained in a further ten patients with supraventricular tachycardias associated with the Wolff-Parkinson-White or other pre-excitation syndromes. In a separate group of eighteen patients in whom A-V junctional tachycardias were induced during intracardiac electrography, conversion to sinus rhythm was achieved in fifteen patients, with prolongation of the cycle length in the others. Circus-movement tachycardias were induced in eight patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, and conversion to sinus rhythm was achieved in seven. The results were less consistent in patients with other supraventricular arrhythmias including ectopic atrial tachycardia and atrial flutter, and, in the single patient with supraventricular and ventricular tachycardia, only the former was controlled. In the single patient with atrial fibrillation complicating the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome who received verapamil, sinus rhythm was restored. Side effects were few and mild, with rare exceptions of profound hypotension, bradycardia and asystole; their management is discussed, and reasons are advanced why their occurrence is likely to be related either to the concomitant administration of beta-adrenergic blockers or to the presence of sinoatrial disease. It appears that verapamil is particularly suitable for the treatment of supraventricular tachycardias due to a circus movement as calcium antagonism is likely to be most effective in the N region of the atrioventricular node.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1974
Roworth Spurrell; Dennis M. Krikler; Edgar Sowton
Abstract Thirteen patients with paroxysmal Supraventricular tachycardia were studied with use of His bundle electrograms and programmed intracardiac stimulation. No patient had evidence of either the Wolff-Parkinson-White or Lown-Ganong-Levine syndrome. During ventricular pacing at a rate of 90 to 180 beats/min retrograde conduction time increased by an average of 80 msec in eight patients; in the remaining five patients the average increase was only 9 msec. The tachycardia was terminated in all 13 patients after intravenous administration of verapamil, 10 mg. This drug acts predominantly on the atrioventricular (A-V) node, and during termination of an A-V nodal reciprocal tachycardia both the antegrade and retrograde conduction times would be expected to be prolonged. During termination of the tachycardia antegrade conduction was prolonged by an average of 43 msec and retrograde conduction by an average of 79 msec in eight patients. However, in five patients antegrade conduction was prolonged by an average of 101 msec and retrograde conduction by an average of only 3 msec. The minimal effect of this drug on retrograde conduction and the minimal increase in retrograde conduction during ventricular pacing in these five patients is strong evidence for the presence of an A-V nodal bypass that was not apparent from the surface electrocardiogram. The potential hazards should atrlal fibrillation occur and allow rapid antegrade conduction in an A-V nodal bypass are discussed.
Journal of Electrocardiology | 1983
Ary L. Goldberger; Rodney S. Bexton; Kevin J. Hellestrand; Richard Cory-Pearce; Roworth Spurrell; Terence A.H. English; A. John Camm
It is usual to record independent activity from both the innervated recipient and the denervated donor atria in cardiac transplant recipients except for occasional, short-lived periods of entrainment that may occur during exercise. In this report a case is described in which, following orthotopic cardiac transplantation, the recipient and donor atria remained synchronized during a variety of physiological and non-physiological situations. Under no circumstances did the two sets of atria beat independently. The mechanisms that might be involved in this unique situation are discussed.
Archive | 1981
Roworth Spurrell; Alan J. Camm; David E. Ward
American Journal of Cardiology | 1982
Roworth Spurrell; Anthony W. Nathan; Rodney S. Bexton; Kevin J. Hellestrand; A. John Camm
American Journal of Cardiology | 1974
Roworth Spurrell; Dennis M Krikler; Edgar Sowton
American Journal of Cardiology | 1973
Roworth Spurrell; Dennis M Krikler; Edgar Sowton
American Journal of Cardiology | 1981
Anthony W. Nathan; Kevin J. Hellestrand; John Camm; Roworth Spurrell
Archive | 1984
Anthony W. Nathan; Rodney Sbexton; Roworth Spurrell; A. John Camm
Archive | 1981
Roworth Spurrell; A. John Camm; David E. Ward