Adding the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, donepezil, to losartan treatment markedly improves long-term survival in rats with chronic heart failure

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Abstract

Aims Modulation of vagal tone using electrical vagal nerve stimulation or pharmacological acetylcholinesterase inhibition by donepezil exerts beneficial effects in an animal model of chronic heart failure (CHF). Considering different treatment mechanisms underlying renin-angiotensin system (RAS) suppression and parasympathetic activation, we hypothesized that parasympathetic activation together with RAS inhibition could attenuate CHF progression. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the therapeutic effects of a combination of donepezil and losartan in CHF rats with extensive myocardial infarction (MI). Methods and results Rats (n-=-85) that had survived extensive MI were implanted with a blood pressure transmitter and were randomly assigned to receive either a combination of donepezil and losartan (DLT group) or losartan alone (LT group). Compared with the LT group, the DLT group showed a significantly lower heart rate without hypotension. DLT therapy further improved 280-day overall survival relative to the LT group (31% vs. 8%, P-=-0.022) by preventing cardiac dysfunction (LV dP/dtmax, 4064-±-170 vs. 3430-±-117-mmHg/s, P-

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Li, M., Zheng, C., Kawada, T., Inagaki, M., Uemura, K., & Sugimachi, M. (2014). Adding the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, donepezil, to losartan treatment markedly improves long-term survival in rats with chronic heart failure. European Journal of Heart Failure, 16(10), 1056–1065. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.164

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