Abstract

Coexisting medical conditions often complicate the selection of antihypertensive drugs. Felodipine, a new vascular-selective calcium antagonist with demonstrated antihypertensive efficacy, has not been found to alter lipid profiles in hypertensive patients. Studies in additional patient populations have yielded insights into the effects of the drug on other diseases that may coexist with hypertension. In individuals with stable angina pectoris or congestive heart failure, acute administration of felodipine reduces systemic vascular resistance and increases cardiac output and total coronary blood flow; myocardial contractility is not depressed at doses that produce a clinically significant reduction in vascular resistance. In patients with coronary stenoses, the drug increases vessel diameter in the vicinity of obstructive lesions. Single-dose and long-term studies in patients with exertional angina have found that felodipine reduces anginal frequency and improves exercise tolerance. In patients with congestive heart failure, chronic dosing with felodipine produces a persistent reduction in vascular resistance and an increase in cardiac output, both at rest and during exercise. Symptomatic improvement and increased exercise tolerance have been noted in some studies. In patients with Raynaud's phenomenon, felodipine has been associated with a dose-dependent improvement in symptomatology. Among individuals with exercise-induced bronchospasm, the drug has no effect on resting bronchial tone and may exert some positive effects during exercise. In hypertensive patients with Type II diabetes, felodipine has not been found to raise glucose levels significantly. The data obtained thus far suggest that felodipine is safe for use in hypertensive patients with a variety of concomitant diseases.

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