Rebound Hemodynamic Events after the Abrupt Withdrawal of Nitroprusside in Patients with Severe Chronic Heart Failure

Abstract
We studied the hemodynamic events that followed abrupt withdrawal of nitroprusside in 20 patients with severe chronic heart failure. With nitroprusside, cardiac index increased from 1.96 to 2.87 liters per minute per square meter of body-surface area, but it decreased to 1.66 (P-5, respectively, with nitroprusside, but increased to 30.4 mm Hg and 2109 dyn·sec·cm-5 (both P<0.001) upon its discontinuation. These rebound changes were maximal 10 to 30 minutes after nitroprusside withdrawal and returned to control levels one to three hours later. Although in 17 of 20 patients, these rebound changes caused no or minimal exacerbation of symptoms, pulmonary edema, which resolved with readministration of nitroprusside, developed in three patients. Activation of reflex vasoconstrictive forces during vasodilator therapy may explain these effects of withdrawal. (N Engl J Med 301:1193–1197, 1979)