Abstract

The aim of the present study was to assess the effects of carvedilol therapy in addition to conventional heart failure therapy on heart rate variability (HRV) and on left ventricular function in 14 patients with mild to moderate heart failure due to idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC). After a 3- to 4-week titration period, carvedilol was titrated up to 50mg daily, or the highest dose tolerated (at least 25mg daily). Maintenance treatment was then continued for 8 weeks. Digital 24-hour Holter recordings were obtained at baseline and after 8 weeks of carvedilol therapy. HRV for the entire 24-hour period was computed in the time domain using the Oxford Medilog Excel 2 analysis system. Measures of HRV included the mean of all coupling intervals between normal beats (RRm), the standard deviation of all normal RR intervals (SDNN), the square root of the mean of the squared differences between adjacent normal RR intervals (rMSSD), and the proportion of adjacent normal RR intervals differing >50 ms (pNN50). Additional treatment with carvedilol induced a significant increase in HRV: SDNN increased from 77+/-21 ms to 110+/-22 ms (p=0.001), rMSSD from 19+/-7 ms to 26+/-7 ms (p=0.02), and mean pNN50-value increased from 1.7+/-1.3% to 5.5+/-4.5% (p<0.01) under therapy with carvedilol. Mean heart rate on carvedilol calculated over 24 hours was 13 beats less than at baseline (75 bpm versus 88 bpm, p<0.01). After 2 months of additional treatment with carvedilol, both hemodynamic and clinical parameters improved: left ventricular ejection fraction increased from 24+/-7% to 30+/-10% (p<0.05), and New York Heart Association class decreased from 2.5+/-0.8 to 1.8+/-0.7 (p<0.05). In summary, eight weeks of additional carvedilol therapy induced a significant increase in HRV parameters related to parasympathetic activity in patients with IDC. Whether increased vagal tone may contribute to the protective effect of carvedilol has to be evaluated by further studies.

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