1.Long-term administration of angiotension-converting enzyme inhibitor improves the outcome of chronic heart failure in senile patients.
Xuelin, CHEN ; Jinnong, ZHANG ; Qinmei, KE ; Yinhuan, ZHANG ; Chengyun, LIU
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2002;22(3):257-9
One hundred and sixteen senile patients (older than 65 years) with chronic heart failure (CHF) were analyzed retrospectively in order to verify if old patients with CHF would benefit from long-term (one year) angiotension-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) treatment. The frequency of drugs (including ACEI, digitalis and diuretic) used was stratified into four degrees accordingly. Development of the CHF was scored with regard to relapse rate and severity of this disease. Stepwise regression analysis was applied to explore the relationship between the scored outcome of CHF and the frequency of individual drug administration. A significant relationship of the scored outcome of CHF to the frequency of ACEI usage but not to digitalis nor to diuretics was found (partial coefficient of the correlation r = 0.42, P = 0.002). It was concluded that the long-term administration of ACEI improves the outcome of CHF in senile patients.
Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors/*administration & dosage
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Chronic Disease
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Heart Failure, Congestive/*drug therapy
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Heart Failure, Congestive/etiology
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Hypertension/complications
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Myocardial Ischemia/complications
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Retrospective Studies
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Treatment Outcome
2.Enoximone therapy as pharmacological bridging to cardiac transplantation.
Jai Wun PARK ; Jost H WIRTZ ; Erik MAY ; Stephan MERTENS ; Peter BRAUN ; Rainer HEINZLER ; Roland HETZER ; Chang Soon KANG ; Karl W HEINRICH
Yonsei Medical Journal 1993;34(1):63-70
Keeping pre-transplant patients alive while waiting for a suitable donor is still a major challenge. New pharmacological agents which can provide improved hemodynamics are urgently needed in patients with severe heart failure who are on the waiting list for cardiac transplantation. Intravenous enoximone therapy (an initial 0.5 mg/kg bolus, then 1.25-5.0 mcg/kg/min infusion) was administered to 35 transplant candidates with progressive heart failure despite optimal drug regimen including digoxin, diuretics, and ACE-inhibitors. In 18 out of 35 patients complete hemodynamic, echocardiographic, neurohumoral, and Holter-ECG studies were performed before and 24 hours after intravenous enoximone infusion. Patients were then continued on chronic oral therapy of 100 mg twice a day. Enoximone infusion increased the cardiac index (CI) (1.78 +/- 0.45 l/min/m2 vs 3.04 +/- 0.83 l/min/m2; p< 0.001) and stroke volume index (SVI)(22.33 +/- 9.45 ml/m2 vs 32.28 +/- 7.29 ml/m2; p< 0.05) and decreased wedge pressure (PCP)(24.1 +/- 11.98 mmHg vs 17.78 +/- 8.76 mmHg; p< 0.05) while mean arterial pressure (MAP) was unchanged. Left ventricular ejection time (LVET)(225.1 +/- 26.9 ms vs 242.2 +/- 25.8 ms; p< 0.05) was increased whereas other echocardiographic parameters were unchanged (Left ventricular end-diastolic dimension LVEDD, left ventricular end-systolic dimension LVESD, fractional shortening FS, early diastolic relaxation parameter Te). Plasma neurohumoral parameters did not change (Aldosterone, epinephrine, renin, atrial natriuretic factor) except for a significant drop in norepinephrine (936.7 +/- 443.2 pg/ml vs 522.4 +/- 287.6 pg/ml; p< 0.05). Holter-ECG parameters (ventricular premature beats VPB, couplets, ventricular tachycardia VT) were not influenced by enoximone infusion.
Adult
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Electrocardiography, Ambulatory
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Enoximone/*therapeutic use
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Female
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Heart Failure, Congestive/physiopathology/therapy
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*Heart Transplantation
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Hemodynamics/drug effects
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Human
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Male
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Middle Age
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Preoperative Care