A multicenter study of the safety and efficacy of benazepril hydrochloride, a long‐acting angiotensin‐converting enzyme inhibitor, in patients with chronic congestive heart failure

1989 
Benazepril hydrochloride is a nonsulfhydryl, long-acting angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor that is orally effective. This study was designed to determine the acute hemodynamic effects of this agent in patients with chronic congestive heart failure. Twenty-six patients with New York Heart Association class III or IV congestive heart failure and left ventricular ejection fractions 12 mm Hg were given 2 or 5 mg benazepril hydrochloride. All doses produced significant (p < 0.05) increases in cardiac output (26.7% to 31.6% above control) and heart rate (5.4% to 11.2% above control) and decreases in systemic (27.1% to 32.0% below control) and pulmonary (34.8% to 55.5% below control) vascular resistances, mean pulmonary (25.3% to 30.3% below control) and systemic (13.4% to 18.5% below control) arterial pressures, and pulmonary artery wedge pressure (46.9% to 51.1% below control). Twenty-four hours after an initial dose, systemic vascular resistance and pulmonary artery wedge pressures remained below control levels. Angiotensin-converting enzyme activity fell by 67.8% ± 6.4%, with a 15.8% ± 7.6% decline in aldosterone levels. Thus benazepril hydrochloride is an effective angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor that produces hemodynamic effects that persist for 24 hours after a single oral dose. Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (1989) 45, 312–320; doi:10.1038/clpt.1989.34
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