Intravenous amrinone had effects on haemodynamics, contractility, and myocardial metabolism that did not differ significantly from the pure vasodilator sodium nitroprusside.
Does intravenous amrinone compared to sodium nitroprusside improve haemodynamics, contractility, and myocardial metabolism in patients with cardiac failure?
In patients with heart failure, intravenous amrinone acts primarily as a vasodilator similar to sodium nitroprusside, without demonstrating a direct positive inotropic effect.
The effects of intravenous amrinone and sodium nitroprusside on haemodynamic indices, left ventricular contractility, and myocardial metabolism were compared in patients with cardiac failure. All patients received one dose of each drug and some received serial doses. Eight patients had dilated cardiomyopathy and six coronary artery disease, but the responses to the two drugs were independent of the aetiology of cardiac failure. Both drugs lowered left ventricular end diastolic pressure and aortocoronary sinus oxygen difference and increased cardiac index and left ventricular efficiency; these effects were dose related. Although the effects of the drugs on peripheral blood substrate concentrations were different, those on myocardial substrate metabolism were identical. Pressure derived indices of contractility in each group of patients were unaltered by either drug. After amrinone administration increases in cardiac index were related to plasma amrinone concentration, but alterations in contractility were not. In four individual patients increases in contractility were associated with alterations in plasma metabolite concentrations, which suggested that catecholamine release had occurred. For the groups of patients as a whole, however, amrinone had effects which did not differ significantly from those of the pure vasodilator, nitroprusside. There was no evidence that amrinone had a direct positive inotropic effect since no dose related changes in indices of contractile function could be established.
Wilmshurst et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Cardiac failure (n=14). Intravenous amrinone vs. Sodium nitroprusside was evaluated on Haemodynamic indices, left ventricular contractility, and myocardial metabolism. Intravenous amrinone had effects on haemodynamics, contractility, and myocardial metabolism that did not differ significantly from the pure vasodilator sodium nitroprusside.