michael s
(Michael S)
#1
54 What is the role of vasodilators in chronic
heart failure? Who should receive them?
Lionel H Opie
There are three main groups of vasodilator therapies used in the
treatment of chronic heart failure.
Nitrates alone
Nitrates on their own can be used intermittently for relief of
dyspnoea – not well documented, but logical to try. For example,
intermittent sublingual or oral nitrates may benefit a patient
already on high doses of loop diuretics and an ACE inhibitor, but
who still has severe exertional or nocturnal dyspnoea, and needs
relief. The continuous use of nitrates does, however, run the risk
of nitrate tolerance, which in turn may be lessened by
combination with hydralazine.^1
Nitrates plus hydralazine
Nitrates plus hydralazine are better than placebo in chronic heart
failure, although inferior to ACE inhibitors. They therefore
represent treatment options when the patient experiences ACE
intolerance, although the drugs of choice for this situation would
be the angiotensin receptor blockers.
The long-acting dihydropyridines (DHPs, e.g. amlodipine and
felodipine)
Regarding the calcium blockers, the non-DHPs are contra-
indicated whereas the long acting DHP amlodipine has
suggestive benefit on mortality in non-ischemic cardiomyopathy,
as shown in the PRAISE study.^2 In the ischaemic patients, the
drug was safe yet without any suggestion of mortality benefit.
Hypothetically, part of the benefit in dilated cardiomyopathy
could be by inhibition of cytokine production,^3 and not by
vasodilatation. PRAISE 2 is focusing on non-ischaemic cardiomy-
opathy patients. In the meantime, long acting DHPs such as
amlodipine or felodipine may be cautiously added when heart
failure patients still have angina that persists after nitrates and