Abstract

Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDE) 3 and 5 regulate cAMP and cGMP signalling in cardiac and smooth muscle myocytes. Important advances in the understanding of the roles of these enzymes have recently been made. PDE3 inhibitors have inotropic and vasodilatory properties, and although they acutely improve haemodynamics in patients with heart failure, they do not improve long-term morbidity and mortality. Although combination therapy with β-adrenergic receptor antagonists or selective inhibition of specific PDE3 isoforms might result in a more favourable long-term outcome, more clinical data are needed to test this proposition. The role of PDE5 inhibitors in the treatment of cardiac disease is evolving. PDE5 inhibitors cause pulmonary and systemic vasodilation. How these drugs will compare with other vasodilators in terms of long-term outcomes in patients with heart failure is unknown. Recent studies also suggest that PDE5 inhibitors may have antihypertropic effects, exerted through increased myocardial cGMP signalling, that could be of additional benefit in patients with heart failure.

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