vasodilators
Table of Contents
vasodilators
see also:
introduction
- vasodilators are medications which relax the smooth muscle in blood vessels, and generally will result in lower blood pressure
- those which primarily act on the venous side will reduce pre-load on the heart
- those which act on the arteries will reduce after-load on the heart
- vasodilators may be “direct-acting” - acting at the blood vessel smooth muscle itself, or, “indirect-acting” - acting on other mediating systems
direct-acting vasodilators
-
- mainly venous at low dose, then also arterial at higher doses
-
- thought to directly act on peripheral arterioles primarily
- slow acetylator phenotypes (50% of Caucasians and 20% of Asians) are at risk of toxicity with usual dosing
-
- potent, rapid direct-acting that greatly reduces arterial blood pressure
- relaxes both venous and arterial circulation
- must be given by iv infusion
- onset within minutes
-
- mainly act on peripheral arterioles, reducing afterload and decreasing myocardial oxygen demand
- diltiazem tends to cause more coronary vasodilation than peripheral arterial vasodilation
- amlodipine and felodipine tend to cause more peripheral arterial vasodilation than coronary vasodilation
- nifedipine and verapamil tend to equally effect coronary and peripheral arteries
- potassium channel activators
- eg. nicorandil, diazoxide, minoxidil
- act on ATP-sensitive potassium channels which are activated and results in antagonism of the action of ATP, preventing closure of the channel, resulting in hyperpolarisation and relaxation of smooth muscle
- beta 2 adrenergic agonists - cause arteries to skeletal muscle to dilate
indirect-acting vasodilators
- centrally acting adrenergic blockers
- angiotensin-II receptor antagonists
vasodilators.txt · Last modified: 2013/10/29 07:33 by 127.0.0.1