BMJ 1995;311:701-702 (16 September)

Editorials

To (ß) block or better block?

ß1 selectivity rarely matters in clinical practice despite the hype

Scarcely a week now passes without a new receptor subtype being described on which either endogenous neurotransmitters or hormones might act, usually as agonists, and which are rapidly proposed as novel targets for drugs, usually as antagonists. It is therefore ironic, but instructive, to recognise the debate that still stirs among doctors and pharmacologists over the relative merits of ß1 selective and non-selective ß blockade after more than 20 years' use in angina and hypertension.

The most recent airing of the debate concerned the paradoxical pressor response to non-selective ß blockade.1 2 In the absence of ß blockade, acute rises in circulating adrenaline concentrations hardly affect mean blood pressure because of opposing actions on systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The rise in systolic blood pressure is due mainly to vasoconstriction mediated by ({alpha}) adrenoceptors, and this is unopposed . . . [Full text of this article]


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Relevant Article

Hazards of (beta) blockade
Ton J M Cleophas and Robert B Kalmansohn
BMJ 1995 311: 1501. [Extract] [Full Text]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Brown, M. J (2003). A RATIONAL BASIS FOR SELECTION AMONG DRUGS OF THE SAME CLASS. Heart 89: 687-694 [Full text]  



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