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July 2001, Volume 15, Number 7, Pages 455-461
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Review Article
Calcium channel blockers, postural vasoconstriction and dependent oedema in essential hypertension
R Pedrinelli, G Dell'Omo and M Mariani

Dipartimento Cardiotoracico, Universita' di Pisa, Italy

Correspondence to: Prof Roberto Pedrinelli, Dipartimento Cardiotoracico, Università di Pisa, 56 100 Pisa, Italy. E-mail: r.pedrinelli@int.med.unipi.it

Abstract

Treatment with calcium channel blocker (CCB)s, dihydropyridines and others, is frequently complicated by dependent oedema in the absence of sodium retention or cardiac failure, a bothersome side effect of unclear aetiology. The present paper reviews our own and other work dealing with the antagonism exerted by such drugs on postural vasoconstriction, a mechanism triggered by limb venous congestion during orthostasis and controlled through a local sympathetic axo-axonic reflex and increased myogenic tone in response to changes in transmural pressure. By stabilising capillary pressure, postural vasoconstriction counteracts fluid hyperfiltration consequent to gravitational stimuli, and consistent evidence shows attenuation of this response by L-type calcium channel blockers. Interference with the postural reflex control of skin blood flow may therefore contribute to dependent oedema, although cannot entirely explain its development. Attenuation of postural vasoconstriction may amplify the fluid hyperfiltration induced by CCBs through other mechanisms, such as imbalanced intracapillary pressure or enhanced vascular permeability, which are the main factors determining net fluid filtration into the interstitial compartment.

Journal of Human Hypertension (2001) 15, 455-461

Keywords

calcium channel blockers; postural vasoconstriction; skin blood flow; hypertension, essential; angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors

Received 10 October 2000; revised 15 January 2001; accepted 31 January 2001
July 2001, Volume 15, Number 7, Pages 455-461
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Article  PDF
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