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cardio:arrhythmias:adenosine

Adenosine (Adenocard®, Adenoscan®)

Drug Overview
Class Antiarrhythmics
Subclass Miscellaneous (AV Nodal Suppressant)
Primary Use Paroxysmal SVT
Route IV rapid bolus
Onset Seconds
Duration < 10 seconds
Half-life ~10 seconds
Metabolism Rapid uptake by RBCs & vascular endothelium
Elimination Intracellular metabolism
Pregnancy Category C
Renal Adjustment No
Hepatic Adjustment No
Black Box Warning No
Controlled No
FDA Approval 1989

Overview

Adenosine is an ultra–short-acting endogenous nucleoside used for rapid termination of AV node–dependent supraventricular tachycardias.

It transiently blocks AV nodal conduction, interrupting reentry circuits involving the AV node.

It is diagnostic and therapeutic in narrow-complex tachycardias.


Mechanism of Action

Primary Target:

  • A1 adenosine receptors in the AV node

Signal Pathway:

  • Gi protein activation
  • ↓ cAMP
  • ↑ outward potassium current
  • Hyperpolarization of AV nodal tissue

Net Effect:

  • Transient AV nodal block
  • Slowed conduction velocity
  • Increased refractoriness

Why It Works:

  • AV node–dependent reentry circuits require continuous conduction
  • Temporary AV block terminates reentry

Indications


Dosing

Adult (IV rapid push):

  • Initial: 6 mg rapid IV bolus
  • If no response: 12 mg
  • May repeat 12 mg once

Administration:

  • Rapid push over 1–2 seconds
  • Immediately followed by saline flush
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring required

Contraindications

Absolute:

  • Second- or third-degree AV block (without pacemaker)
  • Sick sinus syndrome (without pacemaker)
  • Symptomatic bradycardia

Relative:

  • Severe asthma or active bronchospasm
  • Hypotension

Adverse Effects

Common (brief, self-limited):

  • Flushing
  • Chest pressure
  • Dyspnea
  • Lightheadedness
  • Transient asystole

Serious:

  • Bronchospasm
  • Prolonged heart block (rare)

Most side effects last < 30 seconds due to ultra-short half-life.


Drug Interactions

Antagonists:

  • Caffeine
  • Theophylline
  • Aminophylline

Potentiators:

  • Dipyridamole (inhibits adenosine uptake)

Use caution in patients on AV nodal blocking agents.


Monitoring

  • Continuous ECG monitoring
  • Blood pressure
  • Observe for transient AV block

Clinical Pearls

  • Extremely short half-life (~10 seconds)
  • Causes transient complete heart block
  • Diagnostic tool for differentiating SVT vs atrial flutter
  • Not effective for atrial fibrillation
  • Always give via large-bore IV with rapid flush
  • Warn patient: “You may feel strange for a few seconds.”

Comparison Within Antiarrhythmics

Compared to:

Adenosine:

  • Faster onset
  • Much shorter duration
  • Pure AV nodal effect
  • Diagnostic value

cardio/arrhythmias/adenosine.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns