Drugs
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Review Comparative Study
Milrinone. A preliminary review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic use.
Milrinone is a bipyridine derivative of amrinone, with approximately 10 to 75 times greater positive inotropic potency, and separate direct vasodilatory properties. As with amrinone, the relative importance of these properties to treatment of congestive heart failure still remain controversial. The mode of action of milrinone appears to be due in part to selective inhibition of a specific cardiac phosphodiesterase with a subsequent increase in intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate and alteration in intracellular and extracellular calcium transport. ⋯ One small study suggests that short term effects of intravenous milrinone may be superior to those of oral captopril, and it appears that the addition of captopril to milrinone therapy may produce a synergistic haemodynamic effect. Preliminary long term studies suggest that tolerance to the haemodynamic effects of milrinone does not occur, and that the drug is well tolerated and without the thrombocytopenic effects, fever and gastrointestinal complications observed with amrinone. However, it has not been demonstrated that milrinone improves the prognosis of the disease or the overall mortality and its propensity to produce arrhythmias has not been fully agreed upon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)