Cardiovascular and antidepressant effects of imipramine in the treatment of secondary depression in patients with ischemic heart disease
Abstract
The authors report on 12 men with ischemic heart disease who developed secondary depression following myocardial infarction or coronary artery bypass-graft surgery and were treated with imipramine hydrochloride for 4 weeks. Imipramine had an antiarrhythmic effect, manifested by reduction in premature ventricular contractions during treatment. This drug did not produce clinically significant disturbances in cardiac conduction, but orthostatic hypotension led to early termination of the drug treatment in 1 subject. Imipramine treatment was associated with significant improvement in both observer-rated and patient-rated depression scales.
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