Measurement of sTNF-Rs, in addition to antigenic and bioactive TNF-alpha, is essential for evaluation of the activation of this cytokine in CHF. Both sTNF-Rs increase in preterminal patients with severe CHF and might inhibit the in vitro cytotoxicity of TNF-alpha. Antigenic TNF-alpha also increases in severe CHF. The increased levels of sTNF-RII independently correlate with poor short-term prognosis.
Carnitine is an important cofactor in the intermediary metabolism of the heart, and carnitine deficiency is associated with congestive heart failure. We therefore studied the effects of acute (IV bolus, 30 mg/kg body weight) and chronic administration (1.5 mg/d for 1 month) of propionyl-L-carnitine on hemodynamics, hormone levels, ventricular function, exercise capacity, and peak oxygen consumption in 30 patients with chronic congestive heart failure (NYHA II-III, mean EF 29.5 +/- 7%) in a phase II, parallel, single-blind, randomized, and placebo-controlled study. Acute administration of propionyl-L-carnitine caused a significant reduction in pulmonary artery and pulmonary wedge pressures at both day 1 (P < 0.001) and day 30 (P < 0.05) of the study but no other hemodynamics changes. Hormone levels did not change following acute administration of the drug. Chronic administration of propionyl-L-carnitine increased peak oxygen consumption by 45% (from 16.0 +/- 3 to 23.5 +/- 2 mL/kg/min, P +/- 0.001), exercise time by 21% (from 8.1 +/- 0.5 to 9.8 +/- 0.4 minutes, P < 0.01), and peak exercise heart rate by 12% (P < 0.01). These changes were concomitant with a reduction of pulmonary artery pressure. In the treated group, there was a slight, but significant (P < 0.01), reduction in left ventricular dimensions. Hemodynamics and hormones measured after 1 month of oral therapy remained unchanged, except for a fall in pulmonary artery pressures, with a nonsignificant trend towards a fall in filling pressures and plasma norepinephrine. The chronic changes in the propionyl-L-carnitine group were seen at 15 days of treatment, and no further changes in these parameters were seen at 1 month. We conclude that propionyl-L-carnitine increases exercise capacity and reduces ventricular size in patients with congestive heart failure. The drug has no significant effects on hemodynamics or neurohormone levels. The use of a single-blind design reduces the impact of the positive finding on exercise capacity.
Congestive heart failure is a clinical syndrome in which the capacity of the heart to maintain cardiac output is impaired. As a consequence, blood pressure is threatened and endocrine and paracrine mechanisms are activated to preserve circulatory homeostasis and to maintain blood pressure. At terminal stages, a complex multiorgan syndrome develops with severe pump failure, intense systemic vasoconstriction, and avid water and sodium retention. Increasing evidence points to humoral circulating or locally synthesized substances as one of the causes of the terminal consequences of heart failure. Therefore, the hypothesis that the syndrome of heart failure is, at least in part, a humoral disease has developed and is obtaining scientific credibility. Consequently, the neuroendocrine response to heart failure is no longer viewed as a compensatory beneficial mechanism. Instead, we have learned through the years that pharmacological treatment aimed at reducing the effect of the neuroendocrine response is indeed clinically and prognostically advantageous for the patient.
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