The aim of the study was to assess whether trimetazidine (TMZ) could affect dispersion of atrial depolarization and ventricular repolarization. Corrected QT interval (QTc), QTc dispersion (QTc-d), Tpeak-Tend, and Tpeak-Tend dispersion (Tpeak-Tend-d) were measured in 30 patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) before and 6 months after randomization to conventional therapy plus TMZ (17 patients) or conventional therapy alone (13 patients). After 6 months, QTc was significantly reduced in both groups, whereas QT-peak was increased only in control group. Tpeak-Tend-d decreased (from 63.53 +/- 24.73 to 42.35 +/- 21.07 milliseconds, P = .006) only in TMZ group. When subgrouped according to CHF etiology, only ischemic patients on TMZ showed Tpeak-Tend-d reduction (65.00 +/- 27.14 vs 36.67 +/- 11.55 milliseconds, P = .001 in ischemic patients; 60.00 +/- 20.00 vs 56.00 +/- 33.86 milliseconds, P = NS, in nonischemic). These electrophysiological properties indicate an undiscovered mechanism of action of TMZ, which could be useful in conditions at risk of major arrhythmias.
2D-STE polar plots of LV longitudinal strain characterize transmural scar tissue accurately compared with MRI and may facilitate its assessment in clinical practice.
Doxazosin, "on top" of other antihypertensive treatments was safe and effective, and did not appear to be associated with HF-related hospitalization and mortality rates in our patients with mild/moderate HF.
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