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cardio:arrhythmias:digoxin

Digoxin (Lanoxin®)

Drug Overview
Drug Class Cardiac Glycoside
Subclass Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase Inhibitor
Primary Uses HFrEF; Atrial Fibrillation
Route Oral / IV
Onset (IV) 5–30 minutes
Half-life ~36–48 hours (normal renal function)
Metabolism Minimal hepatic
Elimination Renal
Renal Adjustment Yes
Hepatic Adjustment No
Therapeutic Level 0.5–0.9 ng/mL (HF)
Black Box Warning No

Overview

Digoxin is a cardiac glycoside that increases inotropy and enhances vagal tone.

It is used in:

It is NOT first-line therapy in modern heart failure but remains useful in select patients.


Mechanism of Action

Primary Target:

  • Inhibits Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase pump in cardiac myocytes

Cellular Effect:

  • ↑ intracellular Na⁺
  • ↓ Na⁺/Ca²⁺ exchanger activity
  • ↑ intracellular Ca²⁺

Result:

  • ↑ Contractility (positive inotropy)

Autonomic Effect:

  • ↑ Vagal tone
  • ↓ AV nodal conduction
  • ↑ AV nodal refractory period

Net Effects:

  • Improves systolic function
  • Slows ventricular response in AF

Indications

Cardiovascular:

Not used for:

  • Acute decompensated HF
  • Mortality reduction

See also:


Dosing

Heart Failure (maintenance):

  • 0.125–0.25 mg daily

Atrial Fibrillation:

  • Similar dosing
  • Lower doses preferred in elderly

Renal dosing:

  • Reduce dose in CKD
  • Monitor levels carefully

Target serum concentration:

  • 0.5–0.9 ng/mL (HF)
  • Avoid > 2.0 ng/mL

Contraindications

Absolute:

Relative:


Adverse Effects

Common:

  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Anorexia
  • Fatigue

Cardiac:

  • Bradycardia
  • AV block
  • Ventricular arrhythmias

Visual:

  • Yellow vision (xanthopsia)
  • Blurred vision

Toxicity Risk Increases With:

  • Hypokalemia
  • Hypomagnesemia
  • Hypercalcemia
  • Renal dysfunction

Digoxin Toxicity

Mechanism:

  • Excess intracellular calcium
  • Increased automaticity
  • Delayed afterdepolarizations

ECG Findings:

  • Scooped ST segments (“dig effect”)
  • AV block
  • Ventricular ectopy

Treatment:

See:


Drug Interactions

Increase Digoxin Levels:

Electrolyte-mediated Risk:

Additive AV Nodal Suppression:


Monitoring

  • Serum digoxin level
  • Renal function
  • Potassium
  • ECG

Monitor especially in:

  • Elderly
  • CKD
  • Patients on interacting drugs

Comparison Within Heart Failure Therapy

Unlike:

Digoxin:

  • Does NOT reduce mortality
  • Improves symptoms only
  • Useful in HFrEF with AF

Clinical Pearls

  • Narrow therapeutic window.
  • Renally cleared — dose carefully.
  • Hypokalemia dramatically increases toxicity risk.
  • Yellow vision is classic but uncommon.
  • Think of digoxin when AF + HFrEF coexist.

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