During sinus rhythm, the successive responses to the application of electrical stimuli of increasing intensity during the vulnerable period are cardiac stimulations followed by repetitive ventricular responses and then ventricular fibrillation. An impulse of even greater intensity is not followed by ventricular fibrillation (shock at the upper limit of vulnerability) suggesting that defibrillatory shock is effective only when it does not reinduce fibrillation. Two other hypotheses are also proposed in fibrillation, that of critical mass and that of extension of the refractory periods, in particular after biphasic shocks. Clinically, the measurement of the threshold of defibrillation is difficult as it is a random process which does not obey the all or nothing principle. Ideally, a graph of efficacy versus energy should be constructed but this is only possible under experimental conditions. The effects of different antiarrhythmic drugs have been studied in this manner; in general, the sodium channel blockers improve the energies of defibrillation.