β blockers for aortic regurgitation

β blockers for aortic regurgitation

β-Blockers in Aortic Regurgitation (AR)

Bottom line:
β-blockers are generally avoided in chronic severe aortic regurgitation, particularly when the patient is asymptomatic or has preserved left ventricular (LV) function.


Pathophysiological rationale

  • AR severity is time-dependent.
  • β-blockers prolong diastole by reducing heart rate.
  • Longer diastolic duration → increased regurgitant volume → higher LV volume overload.
  • This may worsen LV dilatation and dysfunction over time.

Chronic Aortic Regurgitation

Not routinely recommended, especially in:

  • Severe AR
  • Normal sinus rhythm
  • Preserved LV systolic function

Preferred agents for afterload reduction:

  • ACE inhibitors / ARBs
  • Dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers (e.g., nifedipine)

Situations where β-blockers may be used

β-blockers are not absolutely contraindicated and may be appropriate in selected contexts:

  1. Coexisting indications
    • Hypertension (when other agents are insufficient)
    • Coronary artery disease
    • Prior myocardial infarction
    • Arrhythmias requiring rate control (e.g., atrial fibrillation)
  2. Aortic root disease
    • Marfan syndrome
    • Bicuspid aortic valve with aortopathy
      β-blockers may slow aortic root dilatation (benefit relates to the aorta, not AR itself).
  3. Acute severe AR (temporary use)
    • Rare and controversial
    • Usually avoided; tachycardia may actually be beneficial in acute AR

Acute Aortic Regurgitation

β-blockers are contraindicated

  • Need short diastole to limit regurgitation
  • Management favors:
    • Vasodilators (e.g., nitroprusside)
    • Inotropes if needed
    • Urgent surgery

Guideline perspective (ESC / ACC-AHA aligned)

  • No recommendation for routine β-blocker use in chronic AR
  • Use only if another compelling indication exists

β-Blockers in Aortic Regurgitation — 20 High-Yield MCQs (SS / DM)

β-Blockers in Aortic Regurgitation — 5 Guideline Points (1)
β-Blockers in Aortic Regurgitation — 5 Guideline Points

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