Calcium Channel Blockers
L-type Ca²⁺ entry blockers — dihydropyridines vs non-dihydropyridines (verapamil, diltiazem)
Past RGUHS · 2
RGUHSMar '26
RGUHSSep '25
Introduction
- Definition — Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) — also called Ca2+ entry blockers / Ca2+ antagonists — inhibit Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated L-type ("slow") Ca2+ channels in vascular smooth muscle and cardiac myocytes, producing vasodilatation and negative cardiac actions.
- Two core actions — All CCBs share two pharmacodynamic actions — (i) relaxation of vascular (arteriolar) smooth muscle and (ii) negative inotropic, chronotropic & dromotropic effects on the heart. The ratio of these two effects differs by chemical class and is the single most important organising concept of the topic.
- Historical anchor — Fleckenstein (1960s) introduced the concept of blocking Ca2+ entry into myocytes; verapamil (a papaverine congener, 1962) was the first clinical CCB — a coronary vasodilator with additional negative inotropic/chronotropic effects.
- Clinical relevance — Now first-line in hypertension and angina (all classes) and in supraventricular arrhythmias (non-DHPs only); usable where β-blockers are contraindicated (asthma/COPD, peripheral vascular disease).
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Calcium Channel Blockers
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