vasodilators
Vasodilators are drugs that widen blood vessels by relaxing vascular smooth muscle. They reduce vascular resistance and can affect arteries, veins, or both. Vasodilation can be endothelium-dependent, often involving nitric oxide signaling and cyclic GMP, or endothelium-independent, through direct action on smooth muscle cells or changes in intracellular calcium.
Pharmacologic vasodilators are used to treat hypertension, heart failure, angina, and pulmonary arterial hypertension; some are
Adverse effects commonly include headache, flushing, edema, dizziness, and hypotension; reflex tachycardia can occur with some