Abstract
Twenty patients on conventional therapy for severe congestive heart failure (CHF) were randomly assigned to adjunctive treatment with felodipine (n = 10) or placebo (n = 10) and followed over a 6-month period. Baseline clinical, hemodynamic, angiographic, and neurohumoral estimates of CHF were comparable in the two treatment groups. These estimates remained virtually unchanged at 6 months in patients on placebo therapy, but circulating noradrenaline levels were further augmented. In patients on felodipine therapy, substantial reductions in left ventricular end-systolic pressure, mean arterial pressure, and systemic vascular resistance were observed at 6 months. This afterload reduction led to a preferential increment in the stroke volume (36%) which increased cardiac output (30%), whereas heart rate tended to decrease. The improved hemodynamics during felodipine treatment were paralleled by marked improvements in the angiographic left ventricular ejection fraction and regional segmental wall motion score. The enhanced contractile state of the left ventricle was accompanied by significant reductions in the augmented plasma levels of catecholamines, and the patient clinical status improved. The 6-month mortality rate in the 20 patients was 40% and indicated a closer relation to baseline noradrenaline plasma levels than to hemodynamic or angiographic estimates of CHF. Despite the limited number of patients, the long-term clinical efficacy of felodipine is thus evidenced in patients with CHF and is related to sustained arteriolar dilatation and improved neurohumoral profile by this vasoselective calcium antagonist.