In this report, we describe the clinical results of ivabradine use in a patient with a serious form of unstable angina. For this patient, it was proposed that no other therapeutic, pharmacologic or surgical, option was available. The patient is a 75-year-old woman who presented with repeated episodes of retrosternal chest pain. She notably had a history of type II diabetes mellitus treated by insulin for several years and complicated by diabetic macro-angiopathy. ECG tracings recorded during these episodes showed abnormalities of the lateral repolarization phase of ischaemic nature. There was no measured increase in cardiac enzymes. She was transferred to our CCU with a diagnosis of unstable angina. In our CCU, the patient was treated with nitrates, metoprolol, aspirin, clopidogrel and atorvastatin at maximal sustainable doses. Following persistent clinical-instrumental instability, she was subjected to coronary angiography. This study revealed severe multi-vessel coronary artery disease not amenable to surgery or angioplasty revascularization. In addition to the therapy already provided, a beta-blocker (metoprolol 50 mgx2/die) and diltiazem (30 mgx2/die) were added despite their potentially dangerous and adverse chronotropic effects. Despite this treatment, the patients heart rate remained high (between 80 and 100 beats/min). This heart rate appeared to be the main driving cause of her anginal symptoms. At this point, the use of ivabradine seemed the only option, even though use would be off-label compared to current indications for the drugs use. We started with a low dose of 2.5 mg/b.i.d. and titrated up to 5 mg b.i.d. As we titrated, we witnessed a gradual reduction in heart rate. A consequent stabilization of her clinical pattern progressed into an almost unexpected asymptomatic state. After about a week of clinical observation, the patient recovered. After three months, she remains asymptomatic.
The aim of our study was to analyse the 24-h periodic pattern of blood pressure (BP) in diabetic patients with abnormal responses to cardiovascular reflexes, in order to evaluate the extent of the initial autonomic damage. We studied 44 patients with diabetes mellitus (14 insulin-dependent, 30 non-insulin-dependent; mean duration of disease 6.5 +/- 1.8 years) in good metabolic control (fasting glycaemia less than 140 mg/dl, postprandial glycaemia less than 180 mg/dl, fructosamine less than 285 mg/dl), divided into two subgroups, containing 21 normotensives (13 males and 8 females aged 28-72 years) and 23 hypertensives (13 males and 10 females aged 32-70 years) respectively. All patients showed abnormal responses to at least two out of four tests: deep breathing, lying to standing, Valsalva manoeuvre and postural hypotension. Two sex- and age-matched control groups were recruited, comprising 20 normotensive and 20 hypertensive diabetic patients without dysautonomia, respectively. The reference group consisted of 248 normotensives (135 males and 113 females, aged 18-76 years) and 212 mild-moderate hypertensives (130 males and 82 females, aged 27-66 years). Each patient underwent ambulatory BP monitoring for at least 24 h, using an auscultatory automatic device. Data concerning biological rhythms were analysed by means of periodic functions. We limited the Fourier partial sums to the first three harmonics.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The 24 h periodic pattern of blood pressure was studied in 44 patients with diabetes mellitus (14 type 1, 30 type 2; mean duration of disease 6.5 +/- 1.8 years) in good metabolic control but with abnormal cardiovascular reflex responses; of these 21 were normotensive and 23 hypertensive. All had abnormal responses to at least two out of four tests: deep breathing, lying to standing, Valsalva manoeuvre and postural hypotension. Two sex- and age-matched groups, consisting of 20 normotensive and 20 hypertensive diabetic patients without dysautonomia, were studied as controls. Each patient underwent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring for at least 24 h, using an auscultatory automatic device. Data were analysed using the sum of three periodic functions (Fourier partial sum). In the diabetic normotensive groups, the absolute blood pressure fell to its night-time minimum more rapidly, and increased to its morning maximum more slowly, in those with abnormal cardiovascular reflexes than in the controls (nightly blood pressure decrease -5.8/-4.7 vs. -3.8/-4.0 mmHg/h; increase 4.7/3.6 vs. 5.9/6.1 mmHg/h). The same behaviour was found in both hypertensive groups but the amplitude of the differences was more marked (blood pressure nocturnal decrease -7.7/-7.1 vs. -4.3/-3.9 mmHg/h; increase 3.2/2.1 vs. 5.8/4.3 mmHg/h). This analysis of 24 h ambulatory blood pressure data may be of value in diagnosis and evaluation of autonomic deficits.
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