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Clinical Trial
. 1986 Oct;7(5):254-8.
doi: 10.1055/s-2008-1025770.

Effect of acute calcium slow-channel antagonism on the cardiorespiratory response to graded exercise testing

Clinical Trial

Effect of acute calcium slow-channel antagonism on the cardiorespiratory response to graded exercise testing

N F Gordon et al. Int J Sports Med. 1986 Oct.

Abstract

The effect of acute calcium slow-channel antagonism on the cardiorespiratory responses of 12 healthy males was studied during multistage maximal exercise testing. Oral diltiazem (60 mg), nifedipine (10 mg), verapamil (80 mg), and placebo were administered in a randomized double-blind crossover fashion 1.5 h before an intermittent multistage cycle ergometer exercise test. At peak effort, heart rate, pulmonary ventilation, CO2 production, and respiratory exchange ratio were not significantly modified by drug ingestion. In contrast, maximal O2 consumption (2.6% reduction, P less than 0.02) and performance time (6.4% reduction, P less than 0.02) were reduced by nifedipine. During submaximal exercise, the chronotropic response was accentuated by nifedipine but not by diltiazem or verapamil. Furthermore, nifedipine altered the relationship of percentage of maximal O2 consumption to percentage of maximal heart rate, and both the relative and absolute O2 consumption corresponding to 70% and 85% of the maximal heart rate were significantly reduced after nifedipine ingestion. The results indicated that in persons without symptomatic coronary artery disease exercise performed at a given percentage of the maximal heart rate will yield a lower than expected relative and absolute intensity in the presence of acute nifedipine-induced calcium slow-channel antagonism.

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