Beta-blockers for heart failure: an evidence based review answering practical therapeutic questions.

Med J Malaysia

HT Ong Heart Clinic, Cardiology, 251C Burma Road, Georgetown, Penang 10350, Malaysia.

Published: February 2012

Beta-blockers are underutilised in heart failure because clinicians may be unsure whether all beta-blockers are useful, how therapy should be initiated and whether beta-blockers are contraindicated in some patients. Bisoprolol, carvedilol and metoprolol succinate have been clearly proven to reduce mortality and hospitalisation in patients with Class II to IV heart failure; limited evidence also support short-acting metoprolol tartrate and nebivolol. Initiating dose should be very low (1.25 mg bisoprolol, 3.125 mg carvedilol, 12.5 mg metoprolol succinate) and increased gradually over weeks. Treatment benefit appears proportional to magnitude of heart rate reduction and thus target dose should be the maximum tolerated for adequate bradycardia. Even in decompensated heart failure or those with coexisting bronchospasm, beta-blockers are not contraindicated although the dose may have to be reduced or withheld temporarily. The consistent trial data should reassure clinicians and encourage them to confidently initiate beta blockers in patients with systolic heart failure.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

heart failure
20
beta-blockers contraindicated
8
metoprolol succinate
8
beta-blockers
5
failure
5
heart
5
beta-blockers heart
4
failure evidence
4
evidence based
4
based review
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!