There are three classes of calcium channel blockers:
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Phenyalkylamines (verapamil)
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Benzothiazepines (diltiazem)
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Dihydropyridines (nifedipine, amlodipine, nicardipine, nimodipine)
All three classes exert their effect on L-type voltage-gated calcium channels. These channels are functionally important in cardiac myocytes, vascular smooth muscle cells and beta islet cells.
Toxic effects include1:
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Cardiac: Verapamil and diltiazem suppress cardiac contractility, sino-atrial node automaticity and atrioventricular node conduction. Dihydropyridines exert less of an effect on cardiac pacemaker cells and myocardial contractility.
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Vascular smooth muscle: Verapamil and dihydropyridines cause profound vasodilation and consequently systemic hypotension. Diltiazem causes less vasodilation.
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Metabolic: hypoinsulinaemia and insulin resistance.