[The drug therapy of chronic cor pulmonale].
Кључне речи
Апстрактан
Chronic cor pulmonale is defined as right heart hypertrophy or right ventricular dilatation and/or chronic right heart failure. There are many etiologies which largely determine mortality and drug therapy, but the common cause is increased right ventricular work from primary or secondary pulmonary hypertension assuming two prototypes, the asphyxial and the vascular obliterative type. The main focus of this review concentrates on the various drugs to reduce pulmonary vascular pressure and resistance. The value to correct hypoxaemia is mentioned with regard to its demonstrated important effect of asthmatic patients with cor pulmonale. Continuous oxygen therapy and a potential therapy by almitrine, a respiratory stimulant, have been suggested. Phosphodiesterase inhibitors and dopaminergic drugs have been used successfully to improve right cardiac function in a small number of patients. The use of prostacyclin has a large potential to effectively correct pulmonary vascular haemodynamics but its use is fairly limited by the need of continuous intravenous application. New oral drugs under investigation which stimulate endogenous prostacyclin as well as thromboxane synthetase inhibitors still need further evaluation but might be of potential benefit. The comparison of the side-effects due to vasodilators and calcium antagonists argues for the use of calcium channel blockade for patients with pulmonary hypertension. To define the role of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or the more recently introduced potassium channel openers for treatment of chronic cor pulmonale still await detailed, controlled studies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)