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Pulmonary
hypertension
As
well as erectile dysfunction, sildenafil citrate is also effective
in the rare disease pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH).
It relaxes the arterial wall, leading to decreased pulmonary
arterial resistance and pressure. This in turn reduces the
workload of the right ventricle of the heart and improves
symptoms of right-sided heart failure. Because PDE-5 is primarily
distributed within the arterial wall smooth muscle of the
lungs and penis, sildenafil acts selectively in both these
areas without inducing vasodilation in other areas of the
body. Pfizer submitted an additional registration for sildenafil
to the FDA, and sildenafil was approved for this indication
in June 2005. The preparation is named Revatio, to avoid confusion
with Viagra, and the 20 milligram tablets are white and round.
Sildenafil joins bosentan and prostacyclin-based therapies
for this condition.
Raynaud's
phenomenon
In
2005, Dr. Roland Fries and colleagues reported that sildenafil
cut the frequency of Raynaud's phenomenon attacks, reduced
their duration by roughly one half, and more than quadrupled
the mean capillary blood velocity. This was a double-blind,
placebo-controlled crossover trial and the patients had both
the primary and secondary forms and had all discontinued the
more conventional treatments for this.
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