Abstract

The beta-adrenergic and calcium channel blocking drugs, which individually and combined have proven efficacious in the treatment of angina pectoris, appear to have opposing effects on coronary artery vasomotion. Previous studies have shown that beta-adrenergic blockade may potentiate and calcium channel blockade reverse coronary vasoconstriction during adrenergic cold stimulation in patients with coronary artery disease. To assess the coronary hemodynamic effects of combined drug therapy, thermodilution coronary sinus and great cardiac vein flow and mean arterial pressure were measured during serial cold pressor testing, both before and after 0.1 mg/kg of intravenous propranolol and again after the addition of 10 mg of sublingual nifedipine in 21 patients (9 without [group A1] and 12 with [group A2] greater than 50% narrowing of the left anterior descending coronary artery). In an additional 15 patients (6 patients without [group B1] and 9 with [group B2] left anterior descending artery stenosis), serial cold pressor testing was performed reversing the drug order. Despite significant increases in mean arterial pressure (p less than 0.01) during cold pressor testing, coronary sinus resistance responses after propranolol plus nifedipine were not statistically significant for any group. However, regional coronary resistance responses differed between patients with and without left anterior descending artery stenosis. In group A1, great cardiac vein resistance was unchanged after propranolol plus nifedipine. In group A2, great cardiac vein flow decreased significantly after propranolol plus nifedipine from 8 +/- 17 to -4 +/- 12% (p less than 0.01 versus control), and great cardiac vein resistance increased from 4 +/- 21 to 15 +/- 19% (p less than 0.01 versus control). A similar significant response was observed for groups B1 and B2. Regional coronary vasoconstriction during adrenergic stimulation after combined drug therapy was only observed in patients with significant left anterior descending artery stenosis. These data suggest that in some patients with severe coronary artery disease, combined beta-adrenergic and calcium channel blockade modified regional coronary responses to adrenergic stimulation with an inhomogeneous distribution of blood flow to potentially ischemic regions without affecting total coronary blood flow. These data also imply that an improvement in anginal symptoms after combined drug therapy may be due primarily to mechanisms that reduce myocardial oxygen demand rather than to improved myocardial oxygen supply.

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