Yeah its a group guys.
These lower mortality in CHF:
•Beta blockers, (ONLY misoprolol, carvedilol, bisoprolol)
•ACE#/ARBs
•Spironolactone, (generally only in advanced, but hey, if its the only option pick it)
These are only for symptoms, they DO NOT lower mortality:
•Diuretics
•Digoxin
This is 110% spot-on for
systolic failure-CHF only, apart from the fact that those three beta-blockers should say
metoprolol (specifically metoprolol-XR, carvedilol and bisoprolol).
Aspirin should also be added to this list for lowering mortality. Now you have the complete list.
For
diastolic failure-CHF, the ACE/ARBs and spironolactone are
not proven to lower mortality.
Only aspirin and beta-blockers lower mortality in diastolic failure. This is because knocking out the ACE system is important when ejection fraction is low, but in diastolic failure,
ejection fraction is normal.
These drugs in their respective categories are
exceedingly HY for Step 2CK, as far as knowing which ones decrease mortality vs which ones are merely for Sx.
On the wards, consultants tend to use metoprolol-
XR for CHF, whereas classic metoprolol is more for AF. I've actually had a consultant get pedantic on this point.
I also saw a consultant throw a patient on bisoprolol. I asked her specifically why bisoprolol (and not metoprolol or carvedilol) and she said it was because it's the only one that decreases mortality
and is once daily; the patient had adherence problems.
Spironolactone is the one that I've seen forgotten in patient's charts quite frequently. It's literally become my commonest question to consultants: would you consider spironolactone in this patient? Going into the wards knowing spironolactone lowers mortality is really important because so many patients could benefit from the drug and aren't on it. And on rounds, the doctors are always refining/updating the drug list. Seriously, be the one to jump in with that point if the interns don't speak up.
And yeah, furosemide (+ other diuretics) and digoxin do
not lower mortality.