When your heart begins to fail, your body tries to compensate for
decreased blood flow by stimulating the heart to pump faster and more
forcefully. Your nervous system does this by releasing a chemical called
epinephrine into your blood and by releasing norepinephrine from nerve endings
on the heart. At first, these chemicals (epinephrine and norepinephrine)
increase the pumping action of your failing heart. Eventually, however,
increased levels of epinephrine can actually make your
heart failure worse, probably by causing damage to the
heart muscle cells over time.
Beta-blockers work by blocking the action of epinephrine and
norepinephrine to slow your heart rate and reduce the strength of each
contraction. Beta-blockers may actually cause your symptoms to get worse at
first. However, in the long term, beta-blockers can prevent worsening of heart
failure and, in some cases, improve heart function. These medicines may also
block the development of serious irregular heart rhythms and lower the risk of
sudden death.
How well do beta-blockers work? Beta-blockers
were initially tested in the late 1970s. However, it was not until 15 years
later that a major study of one beta-blocker called carvedilol proved that this
class of medicines could help people with heart failure. The carvedilol study
found that for people with heart failure, the death rate was reduced by 65% in
those who took carvedilol compared with those who took a
placebo.1 Similar results
have been found for several different beta-blockers, including metoprolol and
bisoprolol.
Because the beneficial effects of beta-blockers are so clear, doctors
are more consistently prescribing them for all types of heart failure.
Beta-blockers are considered a first choice in drug treatment for heart
failure, along with diuretics and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
inhibitors.