Abstract
Mounting evidence suggests that increased circulating aldosterone levels, despite angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors therapy, may exert deleterious cardiovascular effects in heart failure, leading to clinical deterioration and poor prognosis. In the past decades, a number of experimental investigations have provided major insight into the mechanism(s) of action and the biological effects of aldosterone on the cardiovascular system, indicating that aldosterone participates in the structural and functional remodeling of cardiac and vascular tissue. In particular, it has emerged that aldosterone plays a key role in the regulation of myocardial extracellular matrix composition and endothelial function with important pathophysiological implications. Such evidence, coupled with the recent beneficial effects of spironolactone, a competitive aldosterone receptor antagonist, in reducing cardiac mortality and morbidity in patients with severe chronic heart failure treated with angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors and loop diuretics, highlights the importance of aldosterone in the pathophysiology of human heart failure. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the regulation of aldosterone production and metabolism in heart failure, the basic mechanism of aldosterone action, and the pathophysiological implications of aldosterone in heart failure, and to discuss recent evidence supporting the efficacy of aldosterone receptor blockade in the treatment of chronic heart failure in humans.
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