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Antianginal drugs

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Angina Pectoris - Chest's Cry for Help

Myocardial ischemia from an oxygen supply/demand mismatch.

  • Stable Angina: Due to fixed coronary stenosis (>70%). Predictable, exertional chest pain relieved by rest or nitroglycerin.
  • Unstable Angina: Plaque rupture with a non-occlusive thrombus. New, worsening, or rest pain. High risk for MI.
  • Prinzmetal's (Variant) Angina: Focal coronary artery vasospasm. Transient, occurs at rest, often at night.

Types of Angina: Coronary Artery Changes

⭐ Prinzmetal's angina is associated with transient ST-segment elevation on ECG, unlike stable or unstable angina which typically show ST-segment depression.

Nitrates - Vessels on Vacation

  • Drugs: Nitroglycerin, Isosorbide Dinitrate, Isosorbide Mononitrate.
  • Mechanism: Primarily venodilators. They release nitric oxide, causing $NO \rightarrow \uparrow cGMP \rightarrow Venodilation$, which leads to a ↓ in preload (left ventricular end-diastolic pressure).

Nitrates and Sodium Nitroprusside Mechanism of Action

  • Adverse Effects: Reflex tachycardia, hypotension, flushing, and headaches.
  • 📌 Tachyphylaxis: Tolerance develops rapidly. A daily "nitrate-free" interval (8-10 hours, typically overnight) is required to restore sensitivity.

⭐ Workers in dynamite factories (exposed to nitrates) would develop tolerance. After a weekend off, re-exposure caused tachycardia, dizziness, and headache, known as "Monday disease."

Beta-Blockers - Heart's Chill Pill

  • Mechanism: Act as negative chronotropes and inotropes → ↓ heart rate & ↓ contractility. This reduces cardiac workload and overall myocardial oxygen demand ($↓ MVO_2$).

  • Types & Selectivity:

    • Cardioselective (β1): Metoprolol, Atenolol, Bisoprolol. Preferred in patients with pulmonary issues.
    • Non-selective (β1 + β2): Propranolol. Use with caution in asthma/COPD due to bronchoconstriction risk.

⭐ Beta-blockers are proven to reduce mortality post-myocardial infarction.

📌 Mnemonic: "BAM" for β1-selective blockers: Bisoprolol, Atenolol, Metoprolol.

Cardiorespiratory effects of beta-blockers in heart failure

Calcium Channel Blockers - Calcium's Gate Crashers

  • Mechanism: Block L-type Ca²⁺ channels → ↓ intracellular Ca²⁺ → coronary vasodilation & ↓ systemic vascular resistance (afterload).
ClassAgentsPrimary SiteClinical Effect
DihydropyridinesAmlodipine, NifedipineVascular Smooth MusclePotent Vasodilation (↓ Afterload)
Non-dihydropyridinesVerapamil, DiltiazemMyocardium↓ Contractility & Heart Rate

Exam Favorite: Can cause gingival hyperplasia (esp. Nifedipine, Verapamil) and peripheral edema (esp. Dihydropyridines).

Calcium Channel Blockers: Mechanism of Action

Newer Agents - The Modern Arsenal

  • Ranolazine: Inhibits the late $I_{Na}$ current, reducing intracellular Ca²⁺ overload and diastolic wall tension. Has minimal effect on heart rate or blood pressure.
  • Ivabradine: Selectively inhibits the $I_f$ (“funny”) current in the SA node, slowing the heart rate without affecting contractility or blood pressure.

Ranolazine can prolong the QT interval.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Nitrates cause potent venodilation, reducing preload. They are key for acute angina relief but require a nitrate-free interval to prevent tachyphylaxis.
  • Beta-blockers are first-line for chronic stable angina, decreasing myocardial O2 demand by lowering heart rate and contractility.
  • Calcium channel blockers are the treatment of choice for vasospastic (Prinzmetal) angina.
  • Ranolazine treats refractory angina by inhibiting the late sodium current, but carries a risk of QT prolongation.
  • Avoid combining non-dihydropyridine CCBs with beta-blockers due to the additive risk of severe bradycardia and AV block.

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