Abstract

1. Low doses of sublingual nifedipine are still used for the treatment of hypertensive crises, although recent studies have raised concerns that sublingual nifedipine may cause serious dose-dependent adverse effects. The present study was performed to test the safety of low-dose sublingual nifedipine administered to elderly hypertensive patients. 2. Systemic blood pressure measurements and electrocardiographic (ECG) examinations were performed before and 45-60 min after a 5 mg dose of sublingual nifedipine in 93 consecutive hypertensive patients, 65 years of age or older, who were without coronary artery disease. In 33 patients, the effects of nifedipine on myocardial lactate metabolism were studied during cardiac catheterization. 3. In all patients, following nifedipine administration, blood pressure (BP) decreased significantly, while heart rate (HR) increased, and symptoms associated with elevated BP disappeared. However, changes consistent with myocardial ischaemia appeared on the ECG in six of 55 patients with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and in one of 38 patients without LVH, although only two of these seven patients experienced angina-like precordial tightness. Sublingual nifedipine decreased myocardial lactate extraction from 52 +/- 13 to 38 +/- 19% in 20 patients with LVH (P = 0.02), but myocardial lactate extraction remained stable in 13 patients without LVH (49 +/- 7 to 50 +/- 5%; NS). The change in lactate extraction was significantly correlated with the percentage change in diastolic arterial pressure (r = 0.77, P < 0.001). 4. These results suggest that sublingual nifedipine, even at the low dose of 5 mg, may cause myocardial ischaemia in some elderly patients with LVH that is associated with a marked reduction in coronary perfusion pressure.

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