Symptoms, haemodynamics, and exercise capacity during long term treatment of chronic heart failure. Experience with pirbuterol.
Open Access
- 1 September 1983
- Vol. 50 (3) , 282-289
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.50.3.282
Abstract
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.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hemodynamic Characterization of Tolerance to Long-Term Hydralazine Therapy in Severe Chronic Heart FailureNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Comparative pharmacology and clinical efficacy of newer agents in treatment of heart failureAmerican Heart Journal, 1981
- Decreased Lymphocyte Beta-Adrenergic-Receptor Density in Patients with Heart Failure and Tolerance to the Beta-Adrenergic Agonist PirbuterolNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- Acute effects of oral pirbuterol on myocardial oxygen metabolism and systemic hemodynamics in chronic congestive heart failure.Circulation, 1981
- Immediate and sustained hemodynamic and clinical improvement in chronic heart failure by an oral angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor.Circulation, 1980
- Tolerance to the circulatory effects of oral isosorbide dinitrate. Rate of development and cross-tolerance to glyceryl trinitrate.Circulation, 1980
- Treatment of Chronic Congestive Heart Failure with Captopril, an Oral Inhibitor of Angiotensin-Converting EnzymeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1979
- How much can we expect from vasodilator therapy in congestive heart failure?Circulation, 1979
- Hemodynamic and clinical tachyphylaxis to prazosin-mediated afterload reduction in severe chronic congestive heart failure.Circulation, 1979
- Sustained Reduction of Cardiac Impedance and Preload in Congestive Heart Failure with the Antihypertensive Vasodilator PrazosinNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977