Circulation, Vol 86, 439-445, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
JG Motwani, MK Fenwick, JJ Morton and AD Struthers
BACKGROUND. Ten chronic heart failure patients were studied on three
occasions in randomized double-blind fashion to compare the acute
hemodynamic, neurohormonal, and renal sodium-handling responses to 1 mg
captopril versus 25 mg captopril, both in the absence of loop diuretic
therapy and during furosemide-stimulated natriuresis. METHODS AND RESULTS.
Compared with placebo, 1 mg captopril caused nonsignificant decreases in
mean arterial pressure and circulating angiotensin II level and had no
effect on glomerular filtration rate as determined by 51Cr-EDTA
elimination. Captopril (25 mg) produced marked suppression of serum
angiotensin II with or without oral furosemide (both p less than 0.002), a
marked decrease in mean arterial pressure (p less than 0.001) that was
accentuated by furosemide (p less than 0.00001), and a decrease in
glomerular filtration rate (p = 0.0007). No difference from placebo in
renal sodium excretion was noted with either 1 or 25 mg captopril in the
absence of furosemide. In contrast, while 25 mg captopril caused slight
attenuation of the natriuretic response to furosemide, 1 mg captopril
significantly enhanced furosemide-induced natriuresis (p less than 0.05).
No correlation was found in our patients between the natriuretic effect of
furosemide and either absolute mean arterial pressure or change in mean
arterial pressure during the furosemide phase of each study session. This
suggests that blood pressure is not the important factor mediating the
divergent renal responses to furosemide of the two captopril dosage
regimens. CONCLUSIONS. We propose that in the face of furosemide-induced
postglomerular vasodilatation in chronic heart failure, captopril at a
starting dose of 1 mg (but not 25 mg) preserves enough circulating
angiotensin II to maintain efferent arteriolar tone and thus glomerular
filtration, while offsetting the antinatriuretic renal tubular effects of
angiotensin II.
ARTICLES
Furosemide-induced natriuresis is augmented by ultra-low-dose captopril but not by standard doses of captopril in chronic heart failure
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Dundee, Scotland, UK.
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