Abstract

The effects of nifedipine and isosorbide dinitrate on the frequency of angina and consumption of nitroglycerin were studied in 19 patients with coronary arterial spasm. After a lead-in phase, the patients were randomized to treatment with either nifedipine or isosorbide dinitrate. After dose titration (40 to 120 mg/day) and evaluation, they were given the alternate therapy. During the initial segment of the double-blind phase, one patient died suddenly (nifedipine phase), one dropped out of the study (nifedpine phase) and another was unable to tolerate therapy (isosorbide dinitrate phase). In the other 16 patients, the mean frequency of angina was less during therapy with both nifedipine (0.69 episode/day, p < 0.05) and isosorbide dinitrate (0.77 episode/day, p < 0.05) phases than during the lead-in phase (1.71 episodes/day). The mean frequency of angina was similar in the nifedipine and isosorbide dinitrate phases. A 50 percent or greater decrease in frequency of angina compared with lead-in phase values occurred in 13 of 18 patients during treatment with nifedipine and in 10 of 16 during treatment with isosorbide dinitrate. Of the 16 patients who completed both double-blind phases, 7 showed greater improvement (that is, a 50 percent or greater decrease in frequency of angina) with nifedipine than with isosorbide dinitrate); 6 others showed greater improvement with isosorbide dinitrate, and the other 3 had a less than 50 percent difference in frequency of angina with the two drugs. These findings in a limited number of patients suggest that both nifedipine and isosorbide dinitrate are effective in certain patients with coronary spasm but that neither drug is clearly superior.

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