| Literature DB >> 16769135 |
Ahmed Ben Driss, Jean-Yves Tabet, Philippe Meurin, Hélène Weber, Nathalie Renaud, Anne Grosdemouge, Claude Bourmayan.
Abstract
We evaluated the role of clinical, BNP and echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) indices in predicting the development of acute heart failure (HF) following beta-blocker initiation and uptitration in 50 stable CHF patients with LVEF < 40% and creatininemia < 250 micromol/l. Use of NYHA class alone predicted the development of acute HF decompensation in only 56% and the absence of this event in 93% of patients. Use of echocardiographic indices (systolic PAP < 40 mmHg or E/A ratio < 1.4 or EDT > 145 ms) predicted the absence of acute HF decompensation in 100% of patients. Use of NYHA > 3 combined with BNP > 398 pg/ml or with echocardiographic indices (i.e. systolic PAP > 40 mmHg or E/A > 1.4 or EDT < 145 ms) predicted the development of acute HF decompensation in 100% of patients. In conclusion use of BNP and echocardiographic LV filling pressure indices in combination with NYHA class may predict beta-blocker tolerance more accurately than clinical indices alone in patients with LV systolic dysfunction (LVEF < 40%).Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 16769135 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2006.01.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol ISSN: 0167-5273 Impact factor: 4.164