PMID: 2481157Jan 1, 1987Paper

Beta-blockade after myocardial infarction: practical implications of major clinical trials.

Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology
N Rehnqvist, G Olsson

Abstract

A survey of the literature concerning 20 years' experience of beta-blockade after myocardial infarction indicates that several positive effects are achieved and that these are neither marginal nor transient. Mortality is reduced during the first year from about 10 to 7%. This has been shown for the individual beta-blockers metoprolol, propranolol, and timolol, and also when the data on all beta-blocker trials have been pooled. The effect is further enhanced if therapy continues. Patients at high risk of mortality can be separated fairly accurately from those at low risk. Thus, prophylactic treatment with the sole purpose of reducing mortality can be individualized. Effects on reinfarction are also already present after 1 year and are enhanced during further follow-up. It has not yet been possible, however, to identify those patients in whom this end-point will not be influenced. Furthermore, during extended follow-up, the proportion of asymptomatic patients who are free of side effects increases during treatment with beta-blockade, whereas it decreases during placebo therapy, due mostly to increased numbers of patients suffering from complications such as reinfarction, angina pectoris, cerebrovascular incidents, arrhythmias, or...Continue Reading

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