Chagas disease is a leading cause of heart failure in Latin America. Sudden death occurs in approximately 40% of patients with heart failure due to Chagas disease. We report a single blind, cross-over trial of prolonged treatment with captopril and placebo in 18 Chagas disease patients with class IV NYHA heart failure. Ventricular dimensions, neurohormones, electrolytes and ventricular arrhythmias were analysed in 11 men and seven women receiving stable doses of digoxin and frusemide who were randomly divided into two intervention groups. Group I patients were given increasing doses of captopril up to 150 mg.day-1 maintained for 6 weeks, group II received the placebo. A 24 h Holter, 2-D echocardiogram, urinary catecholamines, plasma renin and electrolyte determinations were performed at the end of each phase. After a 2-week washout period, the two groups crossed over and another period of 6 weeks was observed. Ventricular arrhythmias were analysed by either Mann-Whitney or the Wilcoxon test. Remaining data were assessed by the Student t-test. A significant reduction in heart rate and urinary catecholamine levels, and enhanced plasma levels of renin, together with a reduction in ventricular couplets was found in the captopril-treated group. We conclude that captopril has a beneficial effect on neurohormones with a subsequently reduced heart rate and diminished incidence of ventricular arrhythmias in patients with Chagas disease. This effect might result in a reduction of mortality caused by the disease, suggesting the need for further investigations.
Exercise stress testing was performed in 50 completely asymptomatic patients in the latent phase of Chagas' disease. In 32 (64%) abnormalities were found consisting of either abnormal ST depression, exercise-induced arrhythmias, or chronotropic incompetence. The latter was determined by comparing the heart rate response to 50 age- and sex-matched control patients without serologic evidence of Chagas' disease. In the absence of an adequate control population we can only speculate as to the significance of the ST depression and arrhythmias during exercise. However, chronotropic incompetence may be a specific marker for Trypanosomal infestation in an endemic area. It probably is an early manifestation of autonomic dysfunction secondary to Chagas' disease.
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