What is the primary indication for the use of calcium channel blockers CCBs?

Currently approved calcium-channel blockers (CCBs) bind to L-type calcium channels located on vascular smooth muscle, cardiac myocytes, and cardiac nodal tissue (sinoatrial and atrioventricular nodes). These channels are responsible for regulating the influx of calcium into cells. In vascular smooth muscle, calcium influx stimulates smooth muscle contraction; in cardiac myocytes calcium influx stimulates muscle contraction; in nodal tissue calcium influx plays an important role in pacemaker currents and in phase 0 of action potentials. Therefore, by blocking calcium entry into the cell, CCBs cause vascular smooth muscle relaxation (vasodilation), decreased myocardial force generation (negative inotropy; decreased contractility), decreased heart rate (negative chronotropy), and decreased conduction velocity (negative dromotropy), particularly at the atrioventricular node.

Therapeutic Indications

Therapeutic Use ofCalcium-Channel Blockers

  • Hypertension
    (systemic & pulmonary)
  • Angina
  • Arrhythmias

By causing vascular smooth muscle relaxation, CCBs decrease systemic vascular resistance, which lowers arterial blood pressure. These drugs primarily affect arterial resistance vessels, with only minimal effects on venous capacitance vessels. Some CCBs also reduce heart rate and contractility, which can lead to a fall in cardiac output and thereby lower arterial pressure.

The anti-anginal effects of CCBs are derived from their vasodilator and cardiodepressant actions. Systemic vasodilation reduces arterial pressure, which reduces ventricular afterload (wall stress) thereby decreasing oxygen demand by the heart. The more cardioselective CCBs (verapamil and diltiazem) decrease heart rate and contractility, which leads to a reduction in myocardial oxygen demand. CCBs can also dilate coronary arteries and prevent or reverse coronary vasospasm (as occurs in Printzmetal's variant angina), thereby increasing oxygen supply to the myocardium.

The antiarrhythmic properties (Class IV antiarrhythmics) of CCBs are related to their ability to suppress firing of aberrant pacemaker sites within the heart, and their ability to decrease conduction velocity and prolong repolarization, especially at the atrioventricular node. This latter action at the atrioventricular node helps to block reentry mechanisms, which can cause supraventricular tachycardia.

Different Classes of Calcium-Channel Blockers

There are three chemical classes of CCBs. They differ not only in their basic chemical structure, but also in their relative selectivity for cardiac versus vascular L-type calcium channels. The most smooth muscle selective class of CCBs are the dihydropyridines. Because of their high vascular selectivity, these drugs are primarily used to reduce systemic vascular resistance and arterial pressure, and therefore are used to treat hypertension. Extended release formulations or long-acting compounds are used to treat angina and are particularly effecting for vasospastic angina; however, their powerful systemic vasodilator and pressure lowering effects can lead to baroreflex cardiac stimulation (tachycardia and increased inotropy), which can offset the beneficial effects of afterload reduction on myocardial oxygen demand. Note that dihydropyridines are easy to recognize because the drug name ends in "pine."

Dihydropyridines include the following specific drugs that are approved in USA: 

  • amlodipine
  • felodipine
  • isradipine
  • nicardipine
  • nifedipine
  • nimodipine (only used for subarachnoid hemorrhage)
  • nitrendipine

Non-dihydropyridines, of which there are only two currently used clinically, comprise the other two classes of CCBs. Verapamil (phenylalkylamine class), is relatively selective for the myocardium, and is less effective as a systemic vasodilator drug. This drug has a very important role in treating angina (by reducing myocardial oxygen demand and reversing coronary vasospasm) and arrhythmias. Diltiazem (benzothiazepine class) is intermediate between verapamil and dihydropyridines in its selectivity for vascular calcium channels. By having both cardiac depressant and vasodilator actions, diltiazem is able to reduce arterial pressure without producing the same degree of reflex cardiac stimulation caused by dihydropyridines.

Side Effects and Contraindications

Dihydropyridine CCBs can cause flushing, headache, excessive hypotension, peripheral edema and reflex tachycardia. Baroreceptor reflex activation of sympathetic nerves and lack of direct negative cardiac effects can make dihydropyridines a less desirable choice for stable angina than diltiazem, verapamil or beta-blockers. Long-acting dihydropyridines (e.g., extended release nifedipine, amlodipine) have been shown to be safer anti-hypertensive drugs, in part, because of reduced reflex responses. This characteristic also makes them more suitable for angina than short-acting dihydropyridines.

The cardiac selective, non-dihydropyridine CCBs can cause excessive bradycardia, constipation, impaired electrical conduction (e.g., atrioventricular nodal block), and depressed cardiac contractility. Therefore, patients having preexistent bradycardia, conduction defects, or heart failure caused by systolic dysfunction (HFrEF) should not be given CCBs, especially the cardiac selective, non-dihydropyridines. CCBs, especially non-dihydropyridines, should not be administered to patients being treated with a beta-blocker because beta-blockers also depress cardiac electrical and mechanical activity and therefore the addition of a CCB augments the effects of beta-blockade.

Revised 10/24/2022

DISCLAIMER: These materials are for educational purposes only, and are not a source of medical decision-making advice.

What conditions are calcium channel blocker medications indicated?

Calcium channel blockers' main uses are to treat heart and circulatory conditions. In the United States, they've been previously approved to treat the following: High blood pressure (hypertension). Arrhythmias (irregular heartbeat rhythms).

What is the purpose of a calcium channel?

Calcium channels are the structural components of cardiac cells that provide a mechanism to modulate the force of contraction. One of the ways that this occurs is through beta-adrenergic receptor (b-AR) stimulation to cause a positive inotropic response that is regulated by protein kinase A (PKA).

What is the meaning of CCBs?

Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) are a group of medicines commonly prescribed to treat conditions of the heart and blood vessels, such as hypertension (high blood pressure), angina, some abnormal heart rhythms and Raynaud's phenomenon (a condition resulting in painful and cold fingers and toes due to narrowing of the ...

What is the function of a calcium channel blocker in treating patients with heart failure?

Calcium channel blockers might be expected to have beneficial effects in systolic HF by reducing peripheral vasoconstriction and thereby reducing left ventricular afterload.