MONDAY, Aug. 13 (HealthDay News) -- People who use a blood
pressure drug called verapamil to treat
That's the finding from a British study that found heart rhythm abnormalities showing up in about one in five patients who took the drug in this unapproved, "off-label" way.
"The good news is, when you stop the drug, the effect wears
off," said study lead author Dr. Peter Goadsby, professor of
neurology at University College London. "So, as long as doctors
know about it, and patients with
The study is published in the Aug. 14 issue of Neurology.
In a review of the medical records of 217 patients given verapamil to treat their cluster headaches, a team led by Goadsby found that 128 had undergone an EKG, 108 of which were available in the medical records.
Of those 108 patients, about one in five exhibited abnormalities
(mostly slowing) in the heart's conduction system -- the "natural
One in three (34 percent) developed non-cardiac side effects
such as lethargy and
"It is a very nice piece of work, because it provides commentary on a boutique [that is, niche and off-label] use of the drug," said Dr. Domenic Sica, professor of medicine and pharmacology in the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System. He was not involved in the study.
Cluster



















