Coronary and systemic hemodynamic effects of intravenous nisoldipine
The American Journal of Cardiology 58(13): 1199-1203
Article 1986 English
Authors
AS
Alan Soward
PF
Pim J. de Feyter
PH
Paul G. Hugenholtz
Abstract
1 min read
Systemic and coronary hemodynamic effects of the new dihydropyridine calcium antagonist nisoldipine were studied over a 30-minute period in 12 patients with angina pectoris. Previously instituted β-blocker therapy was continued. Nisoldipine was administered in an intravenous bolus of 6 μg/kg over 3 minutes. Heart rate increased as mean aortic pressure and systemic vascular resistance decreased in all patients. Cardiac output increased significantly, from 5.8 ± 0.3 to 7.9 ± 0.5 liters/min, 10 minutes after nisoldipine infusion. These trends were maintained over the 30-minute observation period. Coronary sinus blood flow increased from 103 ± 11 to 139 ± 13 ml/min immediately after nisoldipine, but had returned to the control level by 30 minutes, as had the reduction in coronary vascular resistance. Myocardial oxygen consumption and heart rate-systolic blood pressure product did not change significantly. Nisoldipine is a potent peripheral and coronary vasodilator free of major myocardial depressant effects after acute intravenous administration. The systemic vasodilatory effects appear to outlast the coronary effects over 30 minutes.
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