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Submitted on July 29, 2002
From the Division of Circulatory Physiology, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, NY. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: upj1{at}columbia.edu.
BackgroundA synergistic interaction between the angiotensin II (Ang II) type 1 receptor and Methods and ResultsAll subjects were treated with carvedilol or metoprolol for at least 3 months. ACE inhibitor therapy was standardized to enalapril 40 mg/d or the maximally tolerated dose. Exogenous Ang II was administered as sequential intravenous bolus injections (2.5 to 30 ng/kg) titrated to a rise in radial artery systolic pressure of ConclusionsThe vasopressor response to Ang II infusion in patients treated with carvedilol was significantly lower than in patients treated with metoprolol. Whether this is due to the
Revised on October 3, 2002
Accepted on October 7, 2002
Vasopressor Response to Angiotensin II Infusion in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure Receiving
Timothy J. Vittorio MD,
-Blockers
1-adrenergic receptors has been described. We hypothesized that the nonselective
-antagonist carvedilol, through its
1-adrenergic blocking properties, may modulate vascular reactivity to Ang II in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). Accordingly, we compared the vasopressor response to infused Ang II in patients treated with carvedilol and metoprolol, a selective
-antagonist.
20 mm Hg. The dose of Ang II required to elicit a change of 20 mm Hg in radial artery systolic pressure (PD20) defined the vasopressor response to Ang II. Twenty subjects with CHF (mean left ventricular ejection fraction 28±9%, New York Heart Association class II [n=13] and III [n=7]) were studied. There was no correlation between plasma Ang II levels and PD20. However, the PD20 was significantly higher in patients treated with carvedilol than in those treated with metoprolol (20 [range 2.5 to 30] versus 5 [range 2.5 to 10] ng/kg, P=0.019).
1-adrenergic blocking or other ancillary properties of carvedilol warrants further investigation.
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