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473s Clinical Science (1980)5 9 , 4 7 3 ~ 4 7 5 s Effect of atenolol on left ventricular function in hypertensive patients M. M O H S E N I B R A H I M , M. A Z I Z M A D K O U R A N D R A G A A M O S S A L L A M The Cardiac Department and the Technology Transfer Focus,Cairo University and General Public Transport Hospital, Cairo, Egypt Summary 1. Atenolol (100 mg/day) was given to 12 hypertensive patients for 8 weeks, and its effects on mean arterial pressure, cardiac index and ejection phase indices of myocardial performance were examined by echocardiography. 2. Echocardiographic studies were made before treatment after 4 weeks on placebo and repeated after 4 and 8 weeks of atenolol therapy. Mean arterial pressure fell by 14 and 21% after 4 and 8 weeks respectively. Cardiac index fell by 22 and 20%, and stroke index fell by 11 and 7%. Calculated peripheral resistance did not change significantly. 3. Ejection phase indices, namely fractional shortening, ejection fraction and normalized mean rate of circumferential fibre shortening, did not change. End-diastolic volume index did not change and there was no relationship between changes in heart rate and end-diastolic volume index. 4. The study shows that atenolol in the resting state has no effect on certain echocardiographic indices of left ventricular function when given orally to hypertensive patients with normal left ventricular size and function. The reduction in cardiac and stroke indices were presumably secondary to a decrease in cardiac venous filling. Key words: atenolol, cardiac output, contractility, echocardiography, left ventricle. Introduction Atenolol is a /3-adrenoreceptor-blocking drug with cardio-selective properties, which is effective in the treatment of hypertension (Myers, Lewis, Correspondence: Dr. M. Mohsen Ibrahim, 1, El-Sherifein Street, Cairo, Egypt. Steiner & Dollery, 1976). In acute and long-term haemodynamic studies the drug produced a marked reduction in cardiac output with variable but generally little effect on calculated total peripheral resistance (Lund-Johansen, 1976). Studies in animals have show that atenolol has no negative inotropic effect (Harry, Knapp & Linden, 1974). However, the effects of atenolol on myocardial contractility have been demonstrated less frequently in man and then only in acute intravenous experiments (Robinson, Jackson, Fisk & Jewitt, 1978). Information regarding its effect on left ventricular function after oral therapy have not been reported. The purpose of this work was to study the effects of oral atenolol therapy on arterial pressure, cardiac output and left ventricular contractile state in hypertensive patients. Methods Twelve male subjects with essential hypertension were studied as outpatients. Secondary hypertension was excluded as described previously (Ibrahim & Mossallam, 1978). Each patient was followed initially for 4 weeks, during which all previous antihypertensive medication was discontinued and placebo was given. Blood pressure and heart rate were checked at twice-weekly intervals in the supine and standing positions. If at the end of this 4 week placebo pretreatment period supine diastolic blood pressure was greater than 95 mmHg, the patient was included in the study. This then comprised a further 4-8 week treatment period during which all patients were started with a dose of 100 mg of atenolol once daily. At the conclusion of the 4 week pretreatment (first placebo) period, each patient underwent echocardiographic evaluation (Ibrahim, 1979). ' M . Mohsen Ibrahim, M . Aziz Madkour and Ragaa Mossallam 474s The left ventricular ejection time (LVET) was measured from a simultaneously recorded external carotid arterial pulse tracing. Left ventricular volumes were derived by cubing end-diastolic diameter (EDD) and endsystolic diameter (ESD). The difference between the end-diastolic volume (EDV) and end-systolic volume (ESV) was the left ventricular stroke volume. Cardiac output was derived by multiplying the heart rate in the simultaneous electrocardiographic record by the stroke volume. The ejection fraction (EF) was derived from (EDV - ESV)/EDV. The fractional shortening (FS) was calculated as (EDD - ESD)/EDD. The normalized mean rate of circumferential fibre shortening (circ./s) was calculated as (EDD - ESD)/(LVET x EDD). Blood pressure was recorded immediately before each study with a standard sphygomomanometer. The mean arterial pressure was calculated by adding one-third the pulse pressure to the diastolic blood pressure (phase 5). Corrections were made to account for changes in body surface area and the cardiac index, stroke index and the end-diastolic volume index were obtained by dividing the cardiac output, stroke volume and end-diastolic volume by the body surface area respectively. The cardiac index and calculated mean blood pressure were used to estimate the total peripheral resistance. Total peripheral resistance (units m2) = mean arterial presure/cardiac index Echocardiographic studies were repeated in all patients at the conclusion of 4 weeks of atenolol treatment and again after 8 weeks in eight patients. 0.01). The pretreatment stroke index was 66 4.87 ml/m2. After 4 weeks of therapy there was an average decrease by 7-3 ml/m2 (1 1%) and after 8 weeks by 4.5 ml (7%). There was a significant correlation between changes in stroke index and changes in circumferential fibre shortening ( r = 0.694, P < 0.01). The pretreatment total peripheral resistance index was 33 + 2.87 units/m2. The total peripheral resistance index increased after 4 weeks of therapy by 4.08 2.16 units/m2 (12%). After 8 weeks it decreased by 1.13 t 3.25 units/m2 (3%). * End-diastolic volume index The pretreatment end-diastolic volume index was 93 5-9 ml/m2. At the conclusion of 4 and 8 weeks treatment the changes in end-diastolic volume index were insignificant and inconsistent. There was no relationship between changes in heart rate and end-diastolic volume index. * Fractional shortening, ejection fraction and normalized mean rate or circumferential fibre shortening Changes in fractional shortening were insignificant after either 4 or 8 weeks of therapy. The pretreatment fractional shortening was 34.9 2.16%. After atenolol treatment fractional shortening was 33.8 1.66 and 35.3 2.74%. Similarly ejection fraction did not change after atenolol treatment. Changes in circumferential fibre shortening after atenolol therapy were insignificant. The pretreatment values ranged between 0.52 and 1.60 circ./s (1-13 0.088 circ./s). After 4 and 8 weeks of atenolol circumferential fibre shortening was 1-05 0.078 and 1.19 & 0.14 circ./s respectively. * Results Arterial pressure and heart rate The mean arterial pressure was reduced in all 4.79 to subjects by 10% or more, from 141 121 4.72 mmHg after 4 weeks and to 114 6-23 mmHg after 8 weeks of atenolol therapy. Cardiac rate decreased in all patients from 7 1 2.58 to 63 t 2.54 beatdmin and to 61 & 3-31 beats/min after 4 and 8 weeks respectively. * normal subjects for our laboratory is 3.56-5.47 1 min-' m-z with echocardiographic methods.) After 4 weeks of atenolol treatment cardiac index fell to 3.57 0.30 I min-I m-Z. At week 8 it reached 3.30 0.21 1 min-' m-2. There was no relationship between changes in cardiac index and changes in mean arterial pressure, but the changes were significantly related to changes in circumferential fibre shortening ( r = 0.726, P < * * * * * * Cardiac index, stroke index and total peripheral resistance Discussion The pretreatment cardiac index ranged between 3.15 and 5.95 I min-' m-2 (4-58 0.28 1 min-' m-2). (The range of cardiac index in The use of ejection-phase indices of myocardial performance in our study was based upon data from previous observations. A linear correlation * Atenolol and heart in hypertension was found between echocardiographic ejectionphase indices, fractional shortening, ejection fraction, normalized mean rate of circumferential fibre shortening and similar angiographic measurements (Cooper, O'Rouke, Karliner, Peterson & Leopold, 1972). Furthermore, ejection-phase contractile indices have previously been shown to provide a practical and physiologically reasonable means of assessing the level of basal myocardial contractile state (Peterson, Skloven, Ludbrook, Uther & Ross, 1974). The present study supports the previously reported effectiveness of atenolol in lowering high blood pressure (Myers et al., 1976). The fall in blood pressure was secondary to a reduction in cardiac index, the effect on calculated total peripheral resistance was variable and insignificant. On the other hand, there was no correlation between the fall in mean arterial pressure and the reduction in cardiac index; thus the changes in blood pressure and those in cardiac index occurred independently. The reduction in cardiac index was due to both cardiac slowing and decrease in stroke index. The changes in heart rate and stroke index were only significant after 8 weeks of therapy. Atenolol produced no significant change in the ejection-phase indices of myocardial performance, namely fractional shortening, ejection, fraction and circumferential fibre shortening. Studies in animals have shown that atenolol has no negative inotropic effect (Harry et al., 1974). The end-diastolic volume index did not change after atenolol treatment in spite of cardiac slowing. Recent investigations (De Maria, Newmann, Schubart, Lee & Mason, 1979) showed that in normal persons cardiac acceleration produces a reduction in cardiac dimensions and increase in circumferential fibre shortening and that cardiac size was significantly affected by alterations in heart rate. In our study we found no relationship between end-diastolic volume index and heart rate. To explain these discrepancies atenolol may reduce cardiac venous filling and thus end-diastolic volume index would not increase with cardiac slowing. This assumption can also explain the reduction in stroke index after atenolol therapy. Our studies demonstrate that atenolol given orally does not 475s depress cardiac contractility. Reduction in stroke index must be due to mechanisms other than simple depression of cardiac function. It is possible that atenolol, like propranolol (Tarazi, Frohlich & Dustan, 1971), produces contraction of blood volume. Either this factor alone or a redistribution of intravascular volume away from the heart (secondary to an increase in venous distensibility) that favours a diminution in venous return is responsible for the fall in stroke index. A decrease in venous tone after Padrenoreceptor blockade with pindolol has been reported in hypertensive patients (Atterhog, Duner & Pernow, 1976). Acknowledgment This work was supported in part by N.S.F. grant no. OIP76-10455. References AITERHOG,J.H., DUNER,H. & PERNOW,B. (1976) Experience with pindolol, a beta receptor blocker, in the treatment of hypertension.American Journal of Medicine, 60, 872-876. COOPER,R., O'ROUKE, R., KARLINER,J., PETERSON,K. & LEOPOLDG. (1972) Comparison of ultrasound and cineangiographic measurements of the mean rate of circumferential fiber shortening in man. Circulation, 46,9 14-923. DEMARIA,A.N., NEWMANN,A., SCHUBART,PJ., LEE, G. & MASON,D.T.(1979) Systemic correlation of cardiac chamber size and ventricular performance determined with echocardiography and alterations in heart rate in normal persons. American Journal of Cardiology, 43,l-10. HARRY,J.D., KNAPP,M.F. & LINDEN,R.J. (1974) The actions of new beta-adrenergic blocking drug, ICI 66082, on the rabbit papillary muscle and on the dog heart. British Journal of Pharmacology, 51,169-177. IBRAHIM,M.M. (1979) LeR ventricular function in rheumatic mitral stenosis. A clinical echocardiographic study. British Heart Journal, 4 2 , 5 1 6 5 2 0 . IBRAHIM, M.M. & MOSSALLAM, R. (1978) Pindolol in the treatment of mild and moderately severe hypertension. Medical Journal of Cairo University, 46,129-136. LUND-JOHANSEN, P. (1976) Haemodynamic long-term effect of a new Padrenoceptor blocking drug, atenolol (ICI 66082). in essential hypertension. British Journal of Clinica/ Pharmacology, 3,445-45 1. MYERS,M.G., LEWIS,G.R.J., STEINER, J. & DOLLERY, C.T. (1976) Atenolol in essential hypertension. Clinical Journal of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 19.502-507. PETERSON, K., SKLOVEN, D., LUDBROOK, P., UTHER,J. & Ross, J., JR (1974) Comparison of isovolumic and ejection phase indices of myocardial performance in man. Circulation, 49, 1088-1 101. ROBINSON,c., JACKSON, G., FISK, c. & JEWITT, D. (1978) Hemodynamic effects of atenolol in patients with coronary artery disease. British Heart Journal, 40.22-28. TARAZI,R.C., FROHLICH, E.D. & DUSTANH.P. (1971) Plasma volume changes with long-term beta-adrenergic blockade. American Heart Journal, 82,77&776.