Nitrates are medicines that act as vasodilators because they mimic
the effect of one of the body's own natural chemicals called nitric oxide,
which causes arteries and veins to widen (dilate).
Nitrates can improve
heart failure symptoms by:
- Dilating the coronary
arteries. These are the arteries that carry blood to the heart itself.
If your heart failure is caused by coronary artery disease, increasing the
width of these arteries may help deliver more blood to your heart and may help
it pump more efficiently.
- Dilating the
veins. The large veins of the body, particularly in the legs, have the
ability to hold a lot of blood. By dilating these veins, nitrates reduce the
amount of blood returning to the heart, thereby reducing the buildup of fluid
in your lungs.
- Dilating the systemic
arteries. Systemic arteries are blood vessels that carry blood to the
rest of the body (excluding the heart and lungs). The blood pressure in these
arteries determines how hard your heart needs to pump. By dilating these
arteries, nitrates may relieve some of the work your heart needs to
do.
- Dilating the pulmonary arteries.
Dilating the arteries of the lungs (pulmonary arteries) also reduces the
amount of work your heart needs to do. This effect is particularly helpful for
the right side of your heart, which is often weakened along with the left side
of the heart in some forms of heart failure.
How well do nitrates work? Organic nitrates
are usually prescribed with other drugs such as hydralazine,
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, digoxin, and diuretics.
Nitrates typically improve symptoms when they are used in combination with
these other drugs, but they do not increase the survival rate for people with
heart failure. Nitrates have been proven to reduce the rate of death from heart
failure only when they are prescribed together with the vasodilator
hydralazine. The combination of hydralazine and a long-acting nitrate compound
is particularly useful for people who cannot tolerate taking ACE inhibitors.
Nitrates are also a good choice for people with heart failure who also have
coronary artery disease, because these agents can dilate the coronary arteries.
How common are nitrates in treating systolic heart
failure? Nitrates are considered a second choice in medicine for heart
failure. Your doctor probably will prescribe a nitrate in addition to
first-choice drugs like diuretics, ACE inhibitors, and beta-blockers.
A more convenient way of taking a nitrate is by using a patch (for
example, Nitro-Dur) that you wear on the skin for about 12 hours per day. One
problem with all nitrates is that your body can become "tolerant" and no longer
respond if exposed to the nitrates for too long. For this reason, the patch
should be taken off at night, and pills should be taken only during the day.