Publication | Open Access
Symptoms, haemodynamics, and exercise capacity during long term treatment of chronic heart failure. Experience with pirbuterol.
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Citations
23
References
1983
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureCardiac AnaesthesiaCardiovascular PharmacologyPharmacotherapyCardiovascular FunctionCardiovascular ToxicityStructural Heart DiseaseDiastolic FunctionChronic Heart FailureLong Term TreatmentExercise CapacityCardiologySevere Heart FailureAntihypertensive TherapyOpen StudyCardiac CareDiuretic ResistancePharmacologyCardiovascular DiseaseExercise PhysiologyCardiometabolic PhysiologyMedicine
An open study of long term treatment with an oral beta 2 agonist (pirbuterol 20 mg three times daily) was undertaken in 63 patients with severe chronic heart failure. During three months of treatment 20 (32%) patients died, of whom 16 were taking the drug at the time of death. Mortality was related to initial functional class (New York Heart Association classification: 23% in grade III and 75% in grade IV). Concomitant treatment with digoxin did not affect mortality. The drug was well tolerated by most patients but unwanted side effects necessitated withdrawal of the drug in six (10%). Thirty-five patients were continuing to take the drug after three months, of whom 22 reported symptomatic improvement and only four deterioration. There was a relation between symptomatic improvement and increase in exercise capacity. At initial haemodynamic assessment a single dose of pirbuterol increased the cardiac index by 34% and the stroke index by 21%. Left ventricular filling pressure fell by 23% and systemic vascular resistance by 22%. Haemodynamic reassessment after three months of continuous treatment in 29 patients showed maintained improvement in the group as a whole, although individual variation was considerable. There was no apparent relation between haemodynamic improvement and improvement in exercise duration and symptoms. Severe heart failure has a poor prognosis. Identification of those patients who may derive benefit from treatment with a particular drug is not yet possible.
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