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Evaluation of a New Bipyridine Inotropic Agent — Milrinone — in Patients with Severe Congestive Heart Failure

List of authors.
  • Donald S. Baim, M.D.,
  • Arthur V. McDowell, M.D.,
  • Joseph Cherniles, M.D.,
  • Ernest S. Monrad, M.D.,
  • J. Anthony Parker, M.D.,
  • Jerome Edelson, Ph.D.,
  • Eugene Braunwald, M.D.,
  • and William Grossman, M.D.

Abstract

Milrinone, a derivative of amrinone, has nearly 20 times the inotropic potency of the parent compound and does not cause fever or thrombocytopenia in normal volunteers or in animals sensitive to amrinone.

In 20 patients with severe congestive heart failure, intravenous milrinone resulted in significant decreases in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (from 27±2 to 18±2 mm Hg), pulmonary wedge pressure, right atrial pressure, and systemic vascular resistance, as well as a slight reduction in mean arterial pressure. Significant increases occurred in cardiac index (from 1.9±0.1 to 2.9±0.2 liters per minute per square meter) and the peak positive first derivative of left ventricular pressure, with a slight increase in heart rate. Hemodynamic improvement was sustained during a 24-hour continuous infusion.

Nineteen of the 20 patients subsequently received oral milrinone (29±2 mg per day) for up to 11 months (mean, 6.0±0.8), with sustained improvement in symptoms of heart failure. In 10 patients receiving long-term oral milrinone (≥6 months) radionuclide ventriculography showed continued responsiveness, with a 27 per cent increase in left ventricular ejection fraction after 7.5 mg of the drug.

Four patients died after a mean of 4.8 months of therapy, and three patients with severe underlying coronary-artery disease and angina pectoris required additional antianginal therapy. No patient had fever, thrombocytopenia, gastrointestinal intolerance, or aggravation of ventricular ectopy.

We conclude that milrinone shows promise for the long-term treatment of congestive heart failure. (N Engl J Med 1983;309:748–56.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant (RR-01032) from the General Clinical Research Centers Program of the Division of Research Resources, National Institutes of Health, and a grant from the Sterling–Winthrop Research Institute.

Presented in part at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology, New Orleans, March 1983.

We are indebted to the technical and nursing staffs of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory and Coronary Care Unit of the Beth Israel Hospital, to Dr. Bernard J. Ransil for his assistance with the statistical analysis, and to Mrs. Lauren Simonelli and Ms. Pat Allen for their assistance in preparing the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the Charles A. Dana Research Institute and the Harvard-Thorndike Laboratory of the Beth Israel Hospital, Department of Medicine (Cardiovascular Division), Beth Israel Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston; and the Sterling–Winthrop Research Institute, Rensselaer, N.Y. Address reprint requests to Dr. Baim at the Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, MA 02215.

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