Cardiovascular

Beta Blockers: A Complete Clinical Pharmacology Guide


Beta-adrenoceptor blockers remain one of the most important drug classes in clinical pharmacology. For postgraduates, mastering them means understanding not just their uses but the subtle differences between agents.

Classification

  • Cardioselectivity: β1-selective (metoprolol, atenolol, bisoprolol) vs non-selective (propranolol, carvedilol)
  • Intrinsic sympathomimetic activity (ISA): pindolol, oxprenolol
  • Additional properties: carvedilol (α1 block), nebivolol (NO release), labetalol (α1 + β block)

Mechanism & effects

  • ↓ Heart rate, contractility and AV conduction
  • ↓ Renin release from juxtaglomerular cells
  • ↓ Aqueous humour production (relevant in glaucoma)

Exam tip: nebivolol causes vasodilation via NO release — the answer when asked for the most selective beta blocker with additional vasodilatory action.

Contraindications

Asthma/COPD (non-selective agents), high-degree AV block, severe bradycardia, and Prinzmetal’s angina (risk of coronary spasm).


Cardiovascular
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