Left ventricular function in asthmatic children chronically treated with theophylline evaluated by exercise Doppler echocardiography.
Mots clés
Abstrait
To evaluate the chronic effects of theophylline on cardiac function, M-mode and pulsed Doppler derived variables were measured at rest and the suprasternal continuous wave Doppler measurement of ascending aortic flow was used during treadmill exercise testing. Subjects consisted of 13 children with stable asthma (mean 11.7 +/- 2.2 years) who were treated with theophylline for at least one year and 16 age-matched, untreated normal volunteers. In the resting state, the chronic administration of theophylline seemed to produce a slight increase in percent fractional shortening, outflow peak velocity and atrial contribution to ventricular filling in the asthmatic children as compared to normals, but these changes were not statistically significant. The asthmatic children showed significantly lower values than the controls in exercise induced changes in the peak velocity, stroke index and cardiac index, but not in the heart rate. Therefore, chronic administration of theophylline appears to have a minimal effect on resting cardiac function, but a possibly deleterious effect on the cardiac response to exercise testing.