CLINICAL TRIAL
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Effect of Tadalafil on Myocardial and Endothelial Function and Exercise Performance After Modified Fontan Operation.

Better postoperative management of patients who have undergone single ventricle (SV) Fontan procedure could potentially reduce long-term complications and improve the quality of life for patients. The present study determined the effect of tadalafil on myocardial and endothelial function and exercise performance after modified Fontan operation. Patients who had undergone SV modified Fontan operation were enrolled in this clinical trial. The demographic characteristics of the patients were recorded. Before administration of tadalafil and after the trial, ventricular function (MPI, EF, FS, E/A, VTI), exercise performance, and endothelial function were evaluated for sonographic and biochemical markers (FMD, IMT, ICAM, VCAM, NO) using echocardiography, exercise testing, vascular ultrasonography, and biochemical measurements, respectively. A single dose of tadalafil of 1 mg/kg was administered daily for 6 weeks, and the functional class of the patients before and after tadalafil was determined. A total of 15 patients completed this clinical trial. Tadalafil was shown to have a significant effect on myocardial function, exercise performance, and improvement in NYHA functional class (p < 0.05) of study population. It had no significant effect on the biochemical variables and endothelial function except for IMT (p > 0.05), which decreased significantly after tadalafil administration (p < 0.05). The findings indicate that tadalafil is a safe, well-tolerated agent for the use after modified Fontan operation to improve myocardial function and exercise performance and possibly reduce long-term morbidity and mortality of patients. More conclusive results could be obtained from further study with a larger sample size and long-term follow-up.

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