The World Health Organization's ATC classification organizes medical drugs based on therapeutic properties, chemical composition, and anatomy. It helps make essential medicines readily available globally and is widely used in the pharmaceutical industry.
Level | Code | Title | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | C | Cardiovascular system | |
2 | C01 | Cardiac therapy | |
3 | C01B | Antiarrhythmics, class I and III | |
4 | C01BA | Antiarrhythmics, class Ia | |
5 | C01BA05 | Ajmaline |
The DDD is the assumed average maintenance dose per day for a drug used for its main indication in adults. The DDD is a unit of measurement and does not necessarily reflect the recommended or Prescribed Daily Dose. Therapeutic doses for individual patients and patient groups will often differ from the DDD as they will be based on individual characteristics (such as age, weight, ethnic differences, type and severity of disease) and pharmacokinetic considerations.
Route | Amount |
---|---|
ORAL - Oral | 0.3 g |
Active Ingredient | Description | |
---|---|---|
Ajmaline |
Ajmaline is a class Ia antiarrhythmic agent that apparently acts by changing the shape and threshold of cardiac action potentials. It produces potent sodium channel blocking effects and a very short half-life which makes it a very useful drug for acute intravenous treatments. The drug has been very popular in some countries for the treatment of atrial fibrillation in patients with the Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome and in well tolerated monomorphic ventricular tachycardias. It has also been used for many years as a drug to challenge the conduction system of the heart in cases of bundle branch block and syncope. In these cases, abnormal prolongation of the HV interval has been taken as a proof for infrahisian conduction defects tributary for permanent pacemaker implantation. |
Note the following: The list of brand names is continuously updated, and thus does not include the total of products circulating worldwide.