Abstract
The effects of acute and chronic ibopamine treatment on resting and exercise hemodynamics, exercise capacity and plasma catecholamines were evaluated in 25 patients with chronic heart failure, using a double-blind, parallel, placebo-controlled design. During 2 months of therapy with either placebo or ibopamine (100 mg, 3 times daily), 1 patient was withdrawn from each group for worsening heart failure, New York Heart Association functional class improved in 4 patients on ibopamine and in 1 on placebo, and furosemide dose could be decreased in 4 on ibopamine and in no patient on placebo. Acute ibopamine administration induced, in comparison with placebo, a significant increase of cardiac and stroke volume indexes both at rest and peak exercise, with a reduction of systemic vascular resistance. These hemodynamic changes were maintained also after chronic therapy, with no evidence of tolerance development. Exercise capacity (evaluated as peak exercise duration and oxygen consumption, and ventilatory threshold) did not significantly change. Resting and peak exercise norepinephrine plasma levels were significantly reduced after both acute and chronic ibopamine administration. Thus, the hemodynamic and neurohumoral effects of ibopamine make this drug potentially useful for the chronic treatment of congestive heart failure.
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