Alpha-Blocker (Alpha Blacker), Alpha-Adrenergic Blacker

Alpha Blocker (Alpha Blacker), Alpha-Adrenergic Blacker

Alpha Blocker (Alpha Blacker), Alpha-Adrenergic Blacker - a medicinal substance that prevents the stimulation of alpha-adrenergic receptors of the nerve endings of the sympathetic nervous system with the help of adrenaline-like hormones. As a result, it causes dilation of blood vessels (vasodilation) and leads to a decrease in blood pressure. Alpha blockers include the following drugs: doxazocine, phentolamine, phenoxybenzamine, thymoxamine, indoraamine and prazocin. An overdose of these drugs can lead to a sharp drop in blood pressure, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dry mouth, flushing of the skin, convulsions, drowsiness and coma.



Alpha blockers, also known as alpha antagonists, are medications that block the activity of certain receptors in the body. These receptors are involved in regulating the activity of blood vessels, the heart and the nervous system.

The main task of alpha blockers is to normalize blood pressure in cases of arterial hypertension (increased blood pressure in the arteries) or vascular insufficiency caused by a heart attack. They allow you to increase the filling of the heart with blood and increase the efficiency of the heart, which leads to an improvement in the patient’s condition.

One of the most common types of alpha blocker is Alpha Activator Blocker - Alpha Blockadera



Alpha blockers are a pharmacological group of drugs mainly used in cardiac medicine to reduce heart rate (HR). Drugs in this group reduce the oxygen demand of the heart muscle while increasing coronary circulation. Absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract, the drug