Does trimazosin improve exercise capacity and oxygen uptake in patients with chronic stable heart failure?
Long-term therapy with the alpha-blocker trimazosin significantly improves exercise capacity and oxygen uptake in patients with chronic stable heart failure.
Patients with cardiac failure have a generalized sympathetic vasoconstriction that may impair cardiac function and exercise tolerance. The ability of long-term alpha-receptor blockade and vasodilation with trimazosin (TMZ) to improve exercise capacity was studied in patients with chronic, stable heart failure of varying severity (functional exercise classes B to D). Exercise performance was monitored by respiratory gas exchange and air flow before and after patients were randomized to placebo (13 patients) or TMZ were then followed on treatment for up to 52 weeks. Significant (P less than 0.05) and sustained increases in exercise capacity, oxygen uptake, and oxygen pulse were observed with TMZ treatment in each Class B or C patient and in six of nine Class D patients, and were not observed during treatment with placebo.
Weber et al. (Thu,) studied this question.