The American journal of cardiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Effect of sildenafil on cardiac performance in patients with heart failure.
Sildenafil is rarely used in patients with heart failure despite a high prevalence of erectile dysfunction, and the theoretic possibility that by increasing nitric oxide availability, it may improve left ventricular (LV) load and performance. This study aimed to determine the peak effects of sildenafil on LV load and performance in patients with heart failure caused by systolic LV dysfunction. Twenty patients with controlled LV failure and ejection fractions <35% received sildenafil 50 mg or a matching placebo when not receiving regular medication for > or =12 hours, in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, 2-way crossover fashion. ⋯ Aortic and lower limb PWV decreased significantly (by 0.89 and 1.14 m/s, respectively, p <0.0001 for both), as did AIx (by 3.6% absolute, p <0.0001); these remained significant after adjustment for mean pressure and heart rate changes. In conclusion, sildenafil improves cardiac performance because of a decrease in LV load, which is caused by decreases in peripheral resistance, in aortic and large artery stiffness, and in wave reflection from peripheral sites. This can explain the increase in cardiac output and in exercise capacity with sildenafil in patients with heart failure.
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Comparative Study
Chronotropic incompetence as a predictor of death among patients with normal electrograms taking beta blockers (metoprolol or atenolol).
Chronotropic incompetence, or an inability to increase heart rate during exercise, independently predicts death in patients not taking beta blockers. Whether it predicts death in patients taking beta blockers is not known. Consecutive patients (n = 3,736; mean age 58 +/- 11 years; 68% men), who were taking either metoprolol tartrate or atenolol and were referred for symptom-limited exercise testing from 1990 to 2002 at a major academic medical center, formed the prospective study cohort. ⋯ After adjusting for age, gender, heart rate at rest, standard risk factors, other medications, Duke treadmill score, and heart rate recovery, chronotropic incompetence predicted death (adjusted hazard ratio 1.94, 95% confidence interval 1.43 to 2.64, p <0.0001). The association of chronotropic incompetence with death was present, irrespective of which drug was taken or the number of half-lives that had elapsed since the last dose. In conclusion, in patients taking beta blockers, chronotropic incompetence is independently predictive of death.