The effects of prenalterol, a selective beta 1-adrenoreceptor agonist, were studied in a patient with the Shy-Drager syndrome, presenting with incapacitating orthostatic hypotension. The main haemodynamic defect was an impressive postural fall in stroke volume and cardiac output pointing to denervation of the capacitance vessels. Prenalterol 4 X 30 mg orally produced a marked increase in supine and standing blood pressure, along with substantial symptomatic improvement. Notable positive chronotropic and inotropic effects were observed. Association of fludrocortisone 0.5 mg/day resulted in further haemodynamic and symptomatic improvement, presumably due to plasma volume expansion. Haemodynamically, prenalterol and fludrocortisone resulted in a substantial increase in standing cardiac output, primarily due to the chronotropic effects of prenalterol. In addition to the haemodynamic effects, prenalterol stimulated the renin-aldosterone system and restored the normal diurnal pattern of water and sodium excretion, the latter may have contributed to the improvement of orthostatic tolerance. Prenalterol could be a valuable adjunct to the existing treatment schedules of neurogenic orthostatic hypotension.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

orthostatic hypotension
12
effects prenalterol
12
shy-drager syndrome
8
cardiac output
8
symptomatic improvement
8
prenalterol
7
prenalterol treatment
4
orthostatic
4
treatment orthostatic
4
hypotension shy-drager
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!