| Literature DB >> 31707469 |
Abstract
Pediatric heart failure is a clinical syndrome, which needs to be distinctly defined and the pathophysiological consequences considered. Pharmacological treatment depends on the disease- and age-specific myocardial characteristics. Acute and chronic low cardiac output is the result of an inadequate heart rate (rhythm), myocardial contractility, preload and afterload, and also ventriculo-ventricular interaction, synchrony, atrio-ventricular and ventricular-arterial coupling. The treatment of choice is curing the cause of heart failure, if possible. Acute HF therapy is still based to the use of catecholamines and inodilators. The cornerstone of chronic HF treatment consists of blocking the endogenous, neuro-humoral axis, in particular the adrenergic and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.Before neprilysin inhibitors are used in young children, their potential side-effect for inducing Alzheimer disease needs to be clarified. The focus of the current review is put on the differential use of the inotropic drugs as epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine and dobutamine, and also the inodilators milrinone and levosimendan. Considering effects and side-effects of any cardiac stimulating treatment strategy, co-medication with ß-blockers, angiotensin converting inhibitors (ACEIs), angiotensin blockers (ARBs) and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) is not a contradiction, but a senseful measure, even still during the acute inotropic treatment.Missing sophisticated clinical trials using accurate entry criteria and clinically relevant endpoints, there is especially in cardiovascular diagnosis and treatment of young children a compromise of evidence-based versus pathophysiology-based procedures. But based on the pharmacological and pathophysiological knowledge a hypothesis-driven individualized treatment is already currently possible and therefore indicated.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Heart failure; Inotrops; Pharmacology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31707469 DOI: 10.1007/164_2019_267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Handb Exp Pharmacol ISSN: 0171-2004