Common high blood pressure drugs may increase risk of this heart disease

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Drugs based on a molecule called dihydropyridine (such as nifedipine and amlodipine) are commonly prescribed by doctors to treat high blood pressure and angina, a chest pain caused by reduced blood flow to the heart.

However, in a recent study supported by the EU-funded project ESCAPE-NET., researchers found there’s a chance that these same drugs increase the risk of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA).

Because the heart stops pumping blood to the heart and other vital organs during an SCA, failure to receive timely treatment can be lethal.

SCA is responsible for up to half of all deaths caused by heart diseases.

Most of the time, it’s the result of lethal heartbeat irregularities following disruptions in the heart’s electrical activity.

Such disruptions can be caused by a number of factors affecting the heart’s ion channels. When these channels are blocked, the action potential of cardiac cells becomes shorter.

Action potential refers to the change in electrical potential when an impulse travels along the membrane of a muscle cell or nerve cell.

When the action potential duration is shortened, this may cause the aforementioned heartbeat irregularities referred to as ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF).

Because they block cardiac calcium channels, there have been concerns that dihydropyridine-based drugs increase the risk of SCA.

In the study, the researchers examined whether this is true. They tested whether nifedipine and amlodipine, the two most commonly prescribed dihydropyridines in the Netherlands, are linked to a higher risk of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).

The team examined OHCA victims over 18 years of age with documented VT/VF from presumed cardiac causes.

They found high-dose nifedipine is linked to a higher risk of OHCA in the general population. However, this doesn’t apply to low-dose nifedipine or any dose of amlodipine.

The researchers also found differences in the cellular properties of clinically used concentrations between both drugs, and recommend careful titration of nifedipine.

The findings provide clues that may help form future strategies to prevent this adverse nifedipine effect.

If you care about blood pressure health, please read studies about the ‘blue’ in blueberries may help control high blood pressure and findings of unstable blood pressure may mean big dementia risk.

For more information about high blood pressure control, please see recent studies about the eyes have it for high blood pressure clues and results showing that tightly controlling high blood pressure may help people live longer.

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