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  • Article
    Singh BN, Ellrodt G, Peter CT.
    Drugs. 1978 Mar;15(3):169-97.
    Verapamil is a novel antiarrhythmic and antianginal agent which, although introduced in 1962, has only recently gained prominence not only as a significant agent in cardiovascular therapeutics but also as a powerful tool to examine the nature of some of the biophysical phenomena at the membrane of cardiac and other excitable tissues. Verapamil is the prototype of those agents which selectively inhibit membrane transport of calcium, an action which accounts for the drug's peripheral and coronary vasodilator properties, its effect on excitation-contraction coupling and hence its negative inotropic propensity, as well as its depressant effects on the sinus node and atrioventricular conduction. Its pharmacological effects are largely independent of the autonomic nervous system. The main therapeutic uses of the drug are in the management of atrial tachyarrhythmias, angina, and possibly hypertension. The overall exp:rimental and clinical data suggest that verapamil will become an important and safe addition to existing drug regimens, especially as an agent of choice for the short-term treatment of most cases of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias. The initial experience in other arrhythmias, angina and hypertension, is also sufficiently encouraging to justify further detailed clinical trials to define its potential role in cardiovascular therapeutics.
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