First line treatment with beta-blockers followed by adjuvant ACE inhibitors after six months may be safe in older people with heart failure

2006 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-23
Author(s):  
Adesuyi A Leslie Ajayi ◽  
Debbie Singh
2021 ◽  
Vol 238 (10) ◽  
pp. 1069-1076
Author(s):  
Göran Darius Hildebrand ◽  
Zuzana Sipkova

AbstractInfantile haemangiomas (IHs) are the most common benign tumours of the eyelid and orbits in infancy. Beta-blockers, in the form of oral propranolol, have become first-line treatment in severe cases with functionally significant or disfiguring IH. However, adverse drug reactions of oral propranolol in infants are reported in 1 in 11 and serious or potentially life-threatening systemic side effects in 1 in 38, including dyspnoea, hypotension, hyperkalaemia, hypoglycaemia, and cyanosis, therefore requiring careful and close monitoring during the course of systemic treatment. More recently, two large meta-analyses have shown topical beta-blockers, such as timolol maleate 0.5%, to be as effective as oral propranolol in superficial IH, but with no or significantly fewer adverse effects, and have advocated that topical beta-blockers replace oral propranolol as the first-line treatment of superficial IH. We have previously reported the therapeutic response of deep periocular IH to primary topical timolol maleate 0.5% monotherapy. Here we also describe the first successful treatments of large orbital IHs with primary topical timolol maleate 0.5% monotherapy in four infants, resulting in immediate cessation of progression and rapid clinical improvement or resolution in all cases. No adverse effects and no recurrence during long-term follow-up of up to 2.5 years after cessation were seen in any of the patients treated with topical timolol maleate 0.5%.


Author(s):  
E. DUYVER ◽  
T. VAN DE VELDE ◽  
D. RAZOOQI ◽  
K. VERSLUYS ◽  
M. PETROVIC ◽  
...  

Practical advice on the anaphylaxis policy for (COVID-19) vaccination in frail, older patients In view of the imminent start of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign, a practical advice based on the available literature on anaphylaxis in older people was drawn up for use in frail, older patients. The present practical advice provides guidance with regard to the diagnosis of anaphylaxis, the first-line treatment, education and necessary material with the purpose of making nursing homes and vaccination centres well prepared for the large-scale COVID-19 vaccination.


Author(s):  
Giuseppe Rosano

An up-to-date review on guideline directed medical therapies that aim to improve prognosis in HFrEF patients.  Research on medical interventions that may improve prognosis in patients with chronic heart failure has had great success in the past decades. Therefore, there are well- established classes of drugs – ACEi, beta- blockers, MRAs – that should be used as first line treatment in all patients with heart failure. In the past few years newer therapeutic approaches have been shown to improve prognosis in patients with heart failure but, since the evidence generated by these newer classes of drugs is less than that of the first three classes of drugs these therapies should be implemented only after an initial treatment with the first line drugs has been implemented. This article reviews the advances that have achieved in the treatment of heart failure in terms of a prognostic benefit.


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