Abstract

A double blind placebo-controlled study was performed in 12 patients with stable angina pectoris to evaluate the effects of oral verapamil (320 mg/day) on left ventricular function, as measured at rest and during exercise with gated equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography. On verapamil, patients had a lower heart rate-blood pressure product at each work load than with placebo. Anginal threshold increased by 28 ± 19 watts (p < 3.005), and maximal exercise capacity increased by 20 ± 14 watts ( p < 0.001) with verapamil, but the rate-pressure product at the onset of angina and at maximal exercise was unchanged. Left ventricular ejection fraction at rest during verapamil therapy was the same as with placebo therapy. On exercise during placebo therapy, the ejection fraction decreased from 40 ± 9 to 35 ± 11 percent (p < 0.025) because end-systolic volume increased disproportionately compared with end-diastolic volume. On exercise during verapamil therapy, the ejection fraction did not decrease (44 ± 8 versus 45 ± 12 percent) and was significantly higher at identical work loads than on placebo because of a smaller increase in end-systolic volume. Oral verapamil is effective treatment for effort angina and may prevent the decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction due to exercise-induced ischemia.

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