Abstract
Heart failure (HF), as a serious health condition, is characterised by the decreasing ability of the heart to pump enough blood around the body. This study compared the effects of spironolactone and eplerenone on the echocardiographic variables of the left ventricular (LV) function in symptomatic patients diagnosed with new-onset systolic HF. This study was a randomised controlled trial, including 85 symptomatic patients with new-onset systolic HF (namely, dilated cardiomyopathy). The patients were then randomly assigned to two groups in a 1:1 ratio and received either spironolactone or eplerenone in addition to optimal HF therapy for 6 months. Echocardiography was performed to visualise alterations in two-dimensional, pulse Doppler, tissue Doppler, and deformation indices of LV function. The results revealed that the group receiving eplerenone had a significantly greater increase in LV ejection fraction (LVEF) and a decrease in end-systolic LV internal diameter compared with the group receiving spironolactone (intergroup p=0.002 and p=0.006, respectively). There was a significant reduction in the end-diastolic LV internal diameter and the left atrial diameter, and a significant rise in tissue Doppler peak systolic mitral annular velocity in the group taking eplerenone; there were no significant changes in these variables in the group receiving spironolactone (intergroup p=0.006 and p=0.049, respectively). Accordingly, eplerenone had greater favourable effects on LVEF and the global longitudinal strain than spironolactone (B=5.207 [p<0.001] and B= -2.072 [p=0.044]), respectively. This study established that adding eplerenone to optimal HF therapy might be associated with more improvements in echocardiographic variables of LV function than spironolactone in symptomatic patients with new-onset systolic HF.
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