Publication | Open Access
Adverse effects of beta-blockade withdrawal in patients with congestive cardiomyopathy.
189
Citations
11
References
1980
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureCardiomyopathyStructural Heart DiseaseCardiovascular DiseaseCardiac AnaesthesiaPhysiologyPharmacologyCardiovascular PharmacologySympathetic StimulationAdverse EffectsPharmacotherapyDiuretic ResistanceFifteen PatientsMedicineCardiologyCongestive CardiomyopathyDiastolic Function
Fifteen patients with congestive cardiomyopathy who had improved conspicuously on chronic administration of a beta-blocker were studied after withdrawal of the drug. In six patients there was a pronounced deterioration of their clinical condition, and in all of the remaining patients there was a significant decrease in ejection fraction, and signs of compromised diastolic function with pathological apex curves and an increase in third heart sound. All these changes were reversed within a few weeks to a few months after readministration of beta-blocking drugs. This study supports the idea that an aetiological factor in congestive cardiomyopathy may be a pathological response to sympathetic stimulation which could be partly controlled by administration of beta-blocking drugs.
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