Background: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is associated with a high risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). Most frequently SCD occurs in patients with NYHA class II and III.

Aim: To evaluate the influence of prolonged carvedilol therapy on SCD risk in CHF patients.

Methods: The study included 86 patients (81 men and 5 women) aged 56.8+/-9.19 (35-70) years with CHF in NYHA class II and III receiving an ACE inhibitor and diuretics but not beta-blockers. At baseline and after 12 months of carvedilol therapy the following risk factors for SCD were analysed: in angiography - occluded infarct-related artery; in echocardiography - left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) <30%, volume of the left ventricle (LVEDV) >140 ml; in ECG at rest - sinus heart rate (HRs) >75/min, sustained atrial fibrillation, increased QTc; in 24-hour ECG recording - complex arrhythmia, blunted heart rate variability (SDNN <100 ms) and abnormal turbulence parameters (TO and TS or one of them); in signal-averaged ECG - late ventricular potentials and prolonged fQRS >114 ms. The analysis of SCD risk factors in basic examination in patients who suddenly died was also performed.

Results: During one-year carvedilol therapy heart transplantation was performed in 2 patients; 5 patients died. At 12 months the following risk factors for SCD were significantly changed: HRs >75/min (50 vs. 16 patients, p=0.006), LVEF <30% (37 vs. 14 patients, p=0.01), SDNN <100 ms (19 vs. 9 patients, p=0.04). At 12 months the number of risk factors for SCD in each patient was significantly reduced (p=0.001). In patients who suddenly died we found a greater amount of SCD risk factors in basic examination (7 vs. 5) as compared to alive patients.

Conclusions: Prolonged beta-adrenergic blockade reduces risk of sudden cardiac death through significant LVEF increase, reduction of HR at rest and improvement of HRV.

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