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Chest, Vol 86, 394-400, Copyright © 1984 by American College of Chest Physicians
ARTICLES |
DL Johnston, DP Humen and WJ Kostuk
Short-term amrinone therapy has been shown to exert beneficial hemodynamic effects in patients with heart failure. To determine whether this improvement persists longer, the effects of maximally tolerated doses of amrinone on exercise duration, oxygen consumption, and left ventricular function and volumes were examined during maintenance therapy. After four weeks of amrinone therapy, 75 to 150 mg three times a day (mean 292 +/- 70 mg daily), treadmill exercise duration, maximal oxygen consumption, and functional class were unchanged from control values. Radionuclide-derived ejection fraction and end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes were not altered at rest or during maximal supine exercise. Similarly, significant changes in echocardiographic end-systolic and end-diastolic dimensions did not occur. This lack of clinical benefit on functional capacity and left ventricular function, together with frequent adverse reactions, will limit the application of amrinone in the treatment of heart failure. These findings are relevant to the investigation of amrinone-like derivations presently being studied for the treatment of heart failure. Before their release, these agents will require careful evaluation and demonstration of a therapeutic action during maintenance therapy, together with a low incidence of adverse reactions.
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