Deanfield J, Wright C, Krikler S, Ribeiro P, Fox K. Cigarette smoking and the treatment of angina with propranolol, atenolol, and nifedipine.
N Engl J Med 1984;
310:951-4. [PMID:
6366561 DOI:
10.1056/nejm198404123101504]
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Abstract
To determine whether cigarette smoking affects the results of drug treatment for angina, we studied 10 cigarette smokers with angina who were given placebo, nifedipine (60 mg per day), propranolol (240 mg per day), and atenolol (100 mg per day), each for one week. The four-week double-blind study was repeated with the same randomly determined order of drug sequences, after all 10 subjects had stopped smoking. Before and after the subjects stopped smoking, all three drugs significantly reduced the frequency of angina, as measured with angina diaries, and improved the results of maximal exercise testing and 48-hour ambulatory monitoring of ST segments (P less than 0.01). However, during the nonsmoking phase of the study, there was an overall decline in the frequency of angina and an improvement in performance on exercise testing (P less than 0.05) as compared with the smoking period, although the results of 48-hour ambulatory monitoring remained unchanged. The improvement after patients stopped smoking was greater during treatment with nifedipine than during administration of the other two drugs or placebo. Blood levels of propranolol were increased when patients stopped smoking; levels of nifedipine and atenolol were unchanged. Our data show that smoking had direct and adverse effects on the heart and interfered with the efficacy of all three anti-anginal drugs, but with nifedipine the most.
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