Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Levosimendan belongs to a new group of heart failure drugs, the calcium sensitizers. Because these compounds are not yet available for clinical use, the adverse drug events (ADEs) during levosimendan treatment cannot be predicted in detail. To evaluate the tolerability of levosimendan in human subjects, ADEs, safety laboratory values before and after treatment, and ambulatory ECG findings have been collected from several phase I and phase II clinical studies. By June 1994, approximately 200 subjects had received levosimendan. The most common ADE seen in healthy volunteers is headache, reported by some 40% of subjects in oral dosing but only 10% in i.v. dosing. The incidence of headache does not correlate well with the total daily dose of the drug. However, the controlled release formulations tested appear to cause vasodilatory symptoms more frequently than i.v. or rapid release oral formulations. The other typical vasodilatory ADEs seen in healthy volunteers are nausea, palpitation, and dizziness. Symptomatic hypotension is rarely encountered. It appears that heart failure patients tolerate the vasodilatory actions of the drug better than healthy volunteers. Only individual cases of headache, vertigo, and flushing have been reported, and injection site irritation has been the most commonly reported ADE (with an incidence <5%). However, because the longest administration of the i.v. infusion has been only 24 h, the duration of exposure to the drug is too short to allow any definitive conclusions to be drawn. All patients who have received levosimendan have been monitored with an ambulatory ECG. Even though some increase in heart rate is seen with high doses of the drug, there are thus far no signs of an increased incidence of ventricular tachyarrhythmias, nor have there been any noteworthy changes in the clinical laboratory safety tests. The experience with levosimendan is limited thus far and long-term data are lacking. It can be concluded, however, that at least in i.v. dosing the drug is devoid of ADEs with significant medical seriousness.
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PMID:Safety of levosimendan and other calcium sensitizers. 890 34

Levosimendan, a pyridazinone-dinitrile derivative, is a calcium sensitiser with additional action on adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive potassium channels. It is used intravenously (IV) for the treatment of decompensated cardiac failure. At therapeutic doses, levosimendan exhibits enhanced contractility with no increase in oxygen demands. It also produces antistunning effects without increasing myocardial intracellular calcium concentrations or prolonging myocardial relaxation. Levosimendan also causes coronary and systemic vasodilation. In patients with decompensated congestive heart failure (CHF), IV levosimendan significantly reduced the incidence of worsening CHF or death. IV levosimendan significantly increased cardiac output or cardiac index and decreased filling pressure in the acute treatment of stable or decompensated CHF in large, double-blind, randomised trials and after cardiac surgery in smaller trials. Levosimendan is well tolerated, with the most common adverse events (headache, hypotension, nausea) being secondary to vasodilation. It has not been shown to be arrhythmogenic. Levosimendan has shown no clinically important pharmacokinetic interactions with captopril, felodipine, beta-blockers, digoxin, warfarin, isosorbide-5-mononitrate, carvedilol, alcohol (ethanol) or itraconazole.
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PMID:Levosimendan. 1136 86

Levosimendan is one of the first agents of a new class of drugs known as calcium sensitizers. These drugs are believed to increase cardiac contractility by sensitizing cardiac myofibrils to calcium, and may therefore be of clinical benefit in the treatment of low-cardiac output states, particularly congestive heart failure. In addition to sensitizing troponin to intracellular calcium, levosimendan has been shown to inhibit phosphodiesterase III, which may contribute to its positive inotropic effect, and open adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive potassium channels (K(ATP)), which may produce vasodilation. Unlike currently available intravenous inotropes, levosimendan does not increase myocardial oxygen utilization, has not been shown to be proarrhythmic, and has been used effectively in the presence of beta-blocking medications. Levosimendan also has not been shown to impair ventricular relaxation, which was an initial concern with this class of drugs. Clinical studies of levosimendan have demonstrated short-term hemodynamic benefits of levosimendan over both placebo and dobutamine. While large-scale, long-term morbidity and mortality data are scarce, the Levosimendan Infusion versus Dobutamine in severe low-output heart failure (LIDO) study suggested a mortality benefit of levosimendan over dobutamine up to 180 days after treatment. Clinical studies comparing levosimendan with other positive inotropes, namely milrinone, are lacking. Levosimendan treatment appears to be well-tolerated, with the primary adverse events being headache and hypotension. No clinically significant drug-drug interactions have been reported with levosimendan to date. The clinical future of levosimendan will depend on the results of larger, ongoing clinical trials.
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PMID:Levosimendan: a unique approach to the treatment of heart failure. 1214 86

Levosimendan is a new calcium sensitizer developed for the treatment of congestive heart failure. Experimental studies indicate that levosimendan increases myocardial contractility and dilates both the peripheral and coronary vessels. Its positive inotropic effect is based on calcium-dependent binding of the drug to cardiac troponin C. It also acts as an opener of ATP-dependent potassium channels in vascular smooth muscle, thus inducing vasodilation. Although levosimendan acts preferentially as a calcium sensitizer it has also demonstrated selective phosphodiesterase III inhibitory effects in vitro. However, this selective inhibition does not seem to contribute to the positive action at pharmacologically relevant concentrations. Levosimendan has an active metabolite, OR-1896. Similarly to levosimendan, the metabolite exerts its positive inotropic and vasodilatory effects on myocardium and vasculature. The elimination half-life of levosimendan is about 1 hour. Thus, with intravenous administration, the parent drug rapidly disappears from the circulation after the infusion is stopped. The active metabolite, however, has a half-life of approximately 80 hours, and can be detected in circulation up to 2 weeks after stopping a 24-hour infusion of levosimendan. The intravenous formulation of levosimendan has been studied in several randomized comparative studies in patients with decompensated heart failure. Both patients with ischemic and non-ischemic etiology have participated in the studies. Levosimendan produces significant, dose-dependent increases in cardiac output, stroke volume and heart rate, and decreases in PCWP, mean blood pressure, mean pulmonary artery pressure, mean right atrial pressure and total peripheral resistance. With a loading dose, the effects on PCWP and cardiac ouput are seen within few minutes. There is no sign of development of tolerance even with a prolonged infusion up to 48 hours. Cardiac performance is improved with no significant increases in oxygen consumption or potentially malignant rhythm disorders. Due to the formation of an active metabolite, the hemodynamic effects are maintained up to several days after stopping levosimendan infusion. Compared to dobutamine, levosimendan produces similar increase in cardiac output but profoundly greater decrease in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. On the contrary to dobutamine, the hemodynamic effects are not attenuated with concomitant beta-blocker use. Levosimendan has been shown to have favourable effects on symptoms of heart failure superior to placebo and at least comparable to dobutamine. Mortality and morbidity in levosimendan treated patients has been shown to be significantly lower when compared to dobutamine or placebo treated patients. The most common adverse events associated with levosimendan treatment are headache and hypotension, as a likely consequence of the vasodilating properties of the compound. In conclusion, levosimendan offers a new effective option for the treatment of acutely decompensated heart failure. Unlike traditional inotropes, levosimendan seems also to be safe in terms of morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Levosimendan: a new inodilatory drug for the treatment of decompensated heart failure. 1572 64

Levosimendan is a novel calcium-sensitising agent that has been shown to have beneficial inotropic, metabolic and vasodilatory effects in the treatment of acute and advanced chronic heart failure. Levosimendan binds to troponin-C in cardiomyocytes and, thereby, improves cardiac contractility without disturbing the metabolic status of the heart and increasing myocardial oxygen demand or provoking fatal cardiac arrhythmias. Levosimendan also opens ATP-sensitive potassium channels, causing peripheral arterial and venous dilatation, and increasing coronary flow reserve. When it is given as a short-term therapy, levosimendan enhances cardiac output, reduces systemic vascular resistance and lowers pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. Clinical outcomes were significantly reduced in decompensated or postmyocardial infarction heart failure patients who received levosimendan, compared with those on dobutamine or placebo. Recent investigations focusing on the anti-inflammatory and antiapoptotic actions of levosimendan in the failing heart indicate that improvement of cardiac contractile performance is closely related with the drug-induced reduction of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines and apoptosis inducers. The most common adverse effects of levosimendan treatment are hypotension and headache. Overall, levosimendan represents an effective and safe option for the treatment of decompensated heart failure patients.
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PMID:Levosimendan for the treatment of acute heart failure syndromes. 1631 12

Levosimendan increases the sensitivity of the cardiac fibrils to calcium, favorably affects hemodynamics in patients with heart failure. It is a positive inotrope and a peripheral vasodilator. The elimination half-life of the compound is about 1 hour. The drug decreases pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, increases cardiac output with the improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction leading to symptomatic improvement which includes decreased dyspnea and fatigue. Levosimendan can be used safely with diuretics, nitrates, beta-blockers, digoxin, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. The most common adverse effects of levosimendan are headache and hypotension. Prolongation of the QTc interval does not appear to increase the incidence of arrhythmias, including ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, and torsades de pointes. Levosimendan is a novel agent in the treatment of decompensated heart failure, representing a newer class of medications aimed at increasing calcium sensitivity. Its properties holds promise for the treatment of heart failure but further large-scale studies will be needed to determine its precise efficacy, safety, as well as the compound's long-term impact on mortality.
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PMID:Levosimendan and calcium sensitization of the contractile proteins in cardiac muscle: impact on heart failure. 1908 50

Levosimendan is an inodilator indicated for the short-term treatment of acutely decompensated severe chronic heart failure, and in situations where conventional therapy is not considered adequate. The principal pharmacological effects of levosimendan are (a) increased cardiac contractility by calcium sensitisation of troponin C, (b) vasodilation, and (c) cardioprotection. These last two effects are related to the opening of sarcolemmal and mitochondrial potassium-ATP channels, respectively. Data from clinical trials indicate that levosimendan improves haemodynamics with no attendant significant increase in cardiac oxygen consumption and relieves symptoms of acute heart failure; these effects are not impaired or attenuated by the concomitant use of beta-blockers. Levosimendan also has favourable effects on neurohormone levels in heart failure patients. Levosimendan is generally well tolerated in acute heart failure patients: the most common adverse events encountered in this setting are hypotension, headache, atrial fibrillation, hypokalaemia and tachycardia. Levosimendan has also been studied in other therapeutic applications, particularly cardiac surgery - in which it has shown a range of beneficial haemodynamic and cardioprotective effects, and a favourable influence on clinical outcomes - and has been evaluated in repetitive dosing protocols in patients with advanced chronic heart failure. Levosimendan has shown preliminary positive effects in a range of conditions requiring inotropic support, including right ventricular failure, cardiogenic shock, septic shock, and Takotsubo cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Levosimendan: current data, clinical use and future development. 2436 17