Comparison of Adrenergic Beta-blocking Drugs in Angina Pectoris
- 17 July 1971
- Vol. 3 (5767) , 152-155
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.3.5767.152
Abstract
The symptomatic, electrocardiographic, and haemodynamic effects of two adrenergic beta-blocking drugs, oxprenolol and propranolol, have been compared in equipotent intravenous doses in six patients with uncomplicated angina pectoris during treadmill exercise. The method of comparison included double-blind assessment and analysis with placebo control and randomized serial comparison in each patient. Both drugs produced an equal amelioration in symptoms in most of the patients. This was closely correlated with improvement in the electrocardiographic changes and a significant reduction in the exercising heart rate and systemic arterial pressure. This method of double-blind combined subjective and objective assessment carries distinct advantages in the comparative assessment of drug treatments in angina pectoris.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- REVERSIBLE LEFT-VENTRICULAR FAILURE IN ANGINA PECTORISThe Lancet, 1970
- The effect of propranolol on exercise-induced ischemic S-T segment depressionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1969
- The effect of propranolol (Inderal) on the electrocardiogram of normal subjectsAmerican Heart Journal, 1969
- THE EFFECT OF PROPRANOLOL ON ECG IN ANGINA PECTORIS AND ORTHOSTATIC TACHYCARDIA1Acta Medica Scandinavica, 1968
- Haemodynamic effects of beta-adrenergic blockade.Heart, 1968
- Effects of Propranolol and Its Stereoisomers upon Coronary Vascular ResistanceCirculation Research, 1967
- Computers in cardiovascular investigation.Heart, 1967
- Effect of Propranolol on Systemic and Coronary Hemodynamics at Rest and during Simulated ExerciseCirculation Research, 1966
- Effects of exercise on myocardial force-velocity relations in intact unanesthetized man: relative roles of changes in heart rate, sympathetic activity, and ventricular dimensions.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1965
- An Intrinsic Adrenergic Vasodilator Mechanism in the Coronary Vascular Bed of the DogCirculation Research, 1965