الملخص الإنجليزي
A 55-year-old chronic alcoholic male known to be positive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
was admitted to a surgical ward following perianal abscess drainage. He was noted to have sinus bradycardia,
ventricular premature complexes, and mild hypotension. His laboratory investigations revealed mild hypokalaemia.
He was intermittently agitated and alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) was diagnosed. Postoperatively, he received
intravenous piperacillin/tazobactam and metronidazole infusions along with a small dose of dopamine. Analysis of
a 24-hour Holter monitor (ECG) showed a prolonged QT interval with two episodes of self-terminating torsade de
pointes. His AWS was treated, hypokalaemia was corrected, and dopamine, along with antibiotics, was withdrawn.
There was no recurrence of arrhythmias. This case highlights the importance of avoiding QT-prolonging drugs
in hospitalised patients, since hospitalised patients often have multiple risk factors for a proarrhythmic response.