Lisinopril lowers cardiac adrenergic drive and increases beta-receptor density in the failing human heart.

1993 
BACKGROUNDIn subjects with heart failure, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors exhibit mild systemic antiadrenergic effects, as deduced from treatment-related lowering of systemic venous norepinephrine levels. The effects of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors on cardiac adrenergic drive in subjects with heart failure has not previously been investigated.METHODS AND RESULTSIn a placebo-controlled, double-blind crossover study of 14 patients, we measured cardiac and systemic adrenergic drive, myocardial and lymphocyte beta-adrenergic receptors, and hemodynamic changes at baseline and after 12 weeks of therapy. Relative to placebo, lisinopril therapy was associated with only minimal, statistically insignificant changes in hemodynamics, a significant increase in myocardial beta-receptor density, no significant (P < .05) changes in cardiac or systemic adrenergic drive, and no detectable change in lymphocyte beta-receptor density. When subjects were rank ordered into groups with the highest and lowest...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    53
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []