1. Effects of Acute and Chronic Administration of Isosorbide Dinitrate, Sustained-Release Form, in Patients with Angina Pectoris
- Author
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U. Bruegmann, A. Mannes, K.-L. Froer, Blasini R, W. Rudolph, and Hall D
- Subjects
business.industry ,Anginal attacks ,Exercise capacity ,medicine.disease ,Angina ,Vascular reactivity ,Regimen ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,In patient ,Isosorbide dinitrate ,business ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Based on clinical studies of long-term treatment with orally administered nitrates indicating a reduction in the rate of anginal attacks, nitrate consumption, or ST-segment depression as well as an increased exercise capacity, this regimen has been considered useful in the prophylactic treatment of angina pectoris [2, 4, 8, 12]. Moreover, it has been reported that during chronic treatment with nitrates, acute administration of an additional dose, regardless of application form, favorably influences the rate of anginal attacks as well as ST-segment depression and the duration of exercise with maintained efficacy [1, 3, 9]. Apparently discrepant are the withdrawal symptoms, resulting from developed tolerance and observed in industrial workers chronically exposed to nitrates, the mechanism of which has been attributed to a resetting of vascular reactivity [7].
- Published
- 1981