Antiarrhythmic drugs are frequently administered to patients receiving implanted cardioverter defibrillators. Some of these drugs may decrease the efficacy of defibrillation shocks from the defibrillator. Sotalol, a drug with beta-blocking and class III antiarrhythmic properties, lowers defibrillation energy requirements in experimental animals and may do so in humans. Oral sotalol 171 +/- 58 mg was administered before and after device implantation in 25 patients receiving implanted defibrillators. During sotalol therapy, the lowest energy required for successful defibrillation was 5.9 +/- 3.4 J (range 2-15 J). In a concurrent non-randomized comparison group of 23 patients, including 18 treated with amiodarone, the lowest successful energy was 16 +/- 10 J (p < 0.01). In 5 sotalol patients, ventricular fibrillation (VF) could not be induced at all (I patient) or more than 2 or 3 times (4 patients) despite repeated 60 Hz stimulation. The induced VF had a pronounced tendency to terminate spontaneously, with the termination occurring at up to 23 seconds after the offset of 60 Hz stimulation. The cycle length of the VF was 236 +/- 34 msec, significantly greater than in patients not given drug therapy (191 +/- 21 msec, p <0.01). In 10 patients, but none of the controls, intracardiac electrograms during surface electrocardiographic VF were regular, monoform, and without low-amplitude diastolic activity. In addition, monophasic action potentials during apparent VF showed maintenance of distinct and normal morphology. The ventricular effective refractory period increased after sotalol (249.4 +/- 19 to 278.4 +/- 24 msec; p <0.03) and the maximum heart rate response to exercise was limited to 120 +/- 28 beats/min. Sotalol may modify VF and may enhance defibrillation efficacy. In view of its efficacy in life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias, it appears to be particularly well suited as adjunctive therapy in patients with implanted defibrillators.