Drug Monograph

Verapamil

Calan, Calan SR, Isoptin SR, Verelan, Verelan PM, Covera-HS
Non-Dihydropyridine Calcium Channel Blocker (Phenylalkylamine) · Oral & IV
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
6–8 h (single dose); increases with repeat dosing
Metabolism
Hepatic (CYP3A4, CYP1A2, CYP2C substrate & inhibitor)
Protein Binding
~90%
Bioavailability
20–35% (extensive first-pass)
Active Metabolite
Norverapamil (~20% potency; levels ≈ parent)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Non-dihydropyridine CCB (phenylalkylamine)
Available Doses
IR: 40, 80, 120 mg; SR: 120, 180, 240 mg; ER: 100–360 mg; IV: 2.5 mg/mL
Route
Oral (IR, SR, ER) & IV
Renal Adjustment
Use with caution; monitor closely
Hepatic Adjustment
Reduce dose; t½ prolonged to 14–16 h; clearance ~30%
Pregnancy
Category C; embryocidal in rats
Lactation
Excreted in breast milk; discontinue nursing
Schedule
Prescription only (not scheduled)
Generic Available
Yes (multiple formulations)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Essential hypertensionAdultsMonotherapy or combination (oral SR/ER)FDA Approved
Chronic stable anginaAdultsMonotherapy or with nitrates (oral)FDA Approved
Vasospastic angina (Prinzmetal)AdultsMonotherapy (oral)FDA Approved
Unstable angina (crescendo, preinfarction)AdultsAdjunctive (oral)FDA Approved
SVT / PSVTAdults & children (≥1 yr, IV only)Acute conversion (IV); prophylaxis (oral)FDA Approved
Atrial fibrillation / flutter — rate controlAdultsAcute IV rate controlFDA Approved

Verapamil is the prototypical phenylalkylamine calcium channel blocker with the broadest FDA-approved indication profile among CCBs. It exerts the strongest negative inotropic and dromotropic effects of all calcium channel blockers, making it particularly effective for supraventricular arrhythmias but also requiring the most caution regarding cardiac depression. Its local anesthetic potency (1.6 times that of procaine on an equimolar basis) and reduction of GI transit time (causing its signature constipation side effect) further distinguish it from other CCB subclasses. Verapamil does not induce bronchoconstriction and can be used safely in patients with asthma, unlike beta-blockers.

Off-Label Uses

Migraine prophylaxis — supported by AAN guidelines as a Level B preventive agent; typical dose 240–480 mg/day (Evidence: Moderate)

Cluster headache prophylaxis — considered first-line preventive therapy; typical dose 240–960 mg/day (Evidence: Moderate)

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) — used to reduce outflow tract gradient and improve diastolic filling; doses up to 720 mg/day have been studied (Evidence: Moderate)

Chronic oral AF/AFL rate control — ACC/AHA/HRS guideline first-line rate-control agent; 240–480 mg/day divided (Evidence: High)

Dose

Dosing

Adult Oral Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Hypertension — SR/ER (Calan SR, Isoptin SR, Verelan)180 mg QAM (Calan SR); 120 mg QAM (Verelan)240–480 mg/day480 mg/dayTitrate at weekly intervals; Calan SR: take with food; Verelan: may open capsule and sprinkle on applesauce
Calan SR PI starts at 180 mg; 120 mg for elderly or small patients. Verelan PI starts at 120 mg (usual dose 240 mg).
Hypertension — bedtime ER (Verelan PM)100 mg QHS200–300 mg QHS400 mg/dayDesigned for bedtime dosing with controlled onset during early AM hours
Hypertension — bedtime ER (Covera-HS)180 mg QHS180–480 mg QHS480 mg/dayCovers early morning BP surge; score line allows halving if needed
Chronic stable / vasospastic angina — IR80–120 mg TID240–480 mg/day divided TID480 mg/dayTitrate at daily or weekly intervals based on angina response; optimal in most patients at 320–480 mg/day
AF/AFL — chronic oral rate control (off-label)120–240 mg/day divided TID-QID (IR) or SR once-twice daily240–480 mg/day480 mg/dayFirst-line rate-control per ACC/AHA/HRS; target resting HR <110 bpm (lenient) or <80 bpm (strict)
PSVT prophylaxis (oral)240–480 mg/day divided TID-QIDPer response480 mg/dayFor recurrent PSVT when acute IV therapy has been successful

IV Dosing — Acute Arrhythmia Management

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
SVT / PSVT / AF/AFL — adults2.5–5 mg IV over ≥2 min5–10 mg IV after 15–30 min if needed20 mg totalContinuous ECG and BP monitoring mandatory; initial bolus should not exceed 5 mg
Administer over ≥3 min in elderly patients
SVT — children 1–15 years0.1–0.3 mg/kg IV over ≥2 minRepeat once after 30 min if needed5 mg (initial); 10 mg (repeat)Do not exceed 5 mg initial dose; pediatric IV use is FDA-approved for ≥1 year

Special Population Dosing

PopulationStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Hepatic impairmentReduce to ~30% of usual doseIndividualizeReducedHalf-life prolonged to 14–16 h; clearance reduced to ~30% of normal; monitor PR interval closely
Renal impairmentStandard; use cautionMonitor for toxicityStandardMonitor PR interval and signs of overdosage; verapamil is not significantly dialyzable
ElderlyLower end of rangeTitrate cautiouslyStandardElimination half-life may be prolonged; greater sensitivity to conduction effects; IV bolus over ≥3 min
Clinical Pearl: Verapamil vs. Diltiazem

Among the non-dihydropyridine CCBs, verapamil has stronger negative inotropic effects and a higher incidence of constipation (7.3% vs 2–3% with diltiazem), while diltiazem has less impact on cardiac contractility. For patients with borderline LV function who need a non-dihydropyridine CCB, diltiazem is generally preferred. However, verapamil has more robust data for cluster headache prophylaxis and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Both drugs are equally effective for SVT conversion and AF/AFL rate control, with similar AV nodal blocking potency at therapeutic doses.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Verapamil binds to the intracellular surface of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels at the phenylalkylamine binding site, which is distinct from both the dihydropyridine binding site (used by nifedipine, amlodipine) and the benzothiazepine site (used by diltiazem). This binding inhibits transmembrane calcium influx in vascular smooth muscle, cardiac myocytes, and the cardiac conduction system. Verapamil exerts the most pronounced negative inotropic (reduced contractility), chronotropic (reduced heart rate), and dromotropic (slowed AV conduction) effects of any calcium channel blocker. It reduces systemic vascular resistance, coronary artery tone, and myocardial oxygen demand. Its strong AV nodal blockade makes it highly effective for terminating and preventing re-entrant supraventricular tachycardias. Verapamil also possesses local anesthetic activity approximately 1.6 times that of procaine and decreases gastrointestinal transit time, explaining the high incidence of constipation. Importantly, verapamil does not cause bronchoconstriction and can be safely used in patients with reactive airway disease.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption>90% absorbed from GI tract; bioavailability 20–35% due to extensive first-pass hepatic metabolism; IR Tmax 1–2 h; Calan SR Tmax ~5–8 h; food with Calan SR reduces AUC but narrows peak-to-trough ratioLow bioavailability amplifies CYP3A4 interaction magnitude. Calan SR should be taken with food for smoother absorption. Non-linear pharmacokinetics: dose-disproportionate increases in exposure at higher doses.
DistributionProtein binding ~90%; 12 identified plasma metabolites; norverapamil is the main active metabolite (~20% activity, levels approximately equal to parent at steady state)High protein binding limits dialysis efficacy. Norverapamil contributes clinically to both therapeutic and adverse effects, particularly at steady state.
MetabolismExtensive hepatic metabolism via CYP3A4 (primary), CYP1A2, CYP2C; verapamil is both a substrate and moderate inhibitor of CYP3A4 and P-gpBidirectional interaction potential: verapamil levels are raised by CYP3A4 inhibitors and reduced by inducers, while verapamil itself raises levels of many CYP3A4 substrates. Hepatic impairment: t½ 14–16 h, clearance ~30% of normal.
Elimination~70% urine, ~16% feces (as metabolites); 3–4% unchanged in urine; t½ 6–8 h (single dose), increases with repeat dosing; not significantly removed by hemodialysisRepeated dosing leads to accumulation and prolongation of effects, particularly in hepatic or renal impairment. PR interval prolongation correlates with plasma verapamil concentration during early titration.
SE

Side Effects

Adverse effect data below are from pooled clinical trial experience with oral verapamil formulations (N=4,954 patients). Constipation is the hallmark side effect of verapamil, occurring at substantially higher rates than with diltiazem or any dihydropyridine CCB.

≥5% Very Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Constipation7.3%Signature verapamil side effect; caused by reduced GI smooth muscle motility via calcium channel blockade; dose-related; manage with increased fibre, hydration, and stool softeners; typically mild and easily manageable
1–5% Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Dizziness3.3%Related to BP lowering and possible cardiac output reduction; advise slow position changes
Nausea2.7%Usually mild; may improve with food intake for IR formulations
Hypotension2.5%More common during initial titration; 1.7% in Verelan PM trials; potentiated by concurrent antihypertensives
Headache2.2%Paradoxical given verapamil’s use in migraine prophylaxis; usually transient
Peripheral edema1.9%Less common than with dihydropyridines; localized vasodilatory mechanism
CHF / pulmonary edema1.8%Reflects significant negative inotropy; higher risk in patients with pre-existing LV dysfunction
Fatigue1.7%Related to reduced cardiac output and heart rate
Bradycardia (HR <50)1.4%Expected pharmacologic effect; more common in sick sinus syndrome (0.3% in double-blind trials); dose-related
AV block (all degrees)1.2%First-degree: 0.35%; second/third-degree: 0.8%; higher degrees are rare but require dose reduction or discontinuation
Rash1.2%Monitor for progression; rare cases of SJS and erythema multiforme reported post-marketing
Serious Serious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
CHF / pulmonary edema1.8%Weeks to months; higher risk with impaired LV functionDiscontinue verapamil; standard heart failure management; avoid in severe LV dysfunction
Second/third-degree AV block0.8%Early titration; higher risk with sick sinus syndromeHold verapamil; atropine for acute episodes; may require temporary pacing; absolute CI without pacemaker
AsystoleVery rareUsually brief (seconds); more common with sick sinus syndromeUsually self-terminating; if prolonged: CPR, atropine, isoproterenol, IV calcium, pacing
Rapid ventricular rate (WPW/accessory pathway)Very rare but life-threateningMinutes after IV administration in AF with WPWDC cardioversion immediately; verapamil absolutely contraindicated in AF/AFL with accessory pathway
Hepatocellular injuryRareWeeks to months; proven by rechallenge in several casesCheck LFTs; discontinue if significant elevation; half of reported cases had clinical symptoms (malaise, fever, RUQ pain)
Paralytic ileusRareVariable; related to GI hypomotilityDiscontinue; supportive GI management; distinguish from mechanical obstruction
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates
Oral Trials (N=4,954)
Low
Context: Most adverse effects responded well to dose reduction; verapamil rarely required discontinuation (FDA PI)
HCM Patients (High-Dose Studies)
Higher
Context: In 120 HCM patients at doses up to 720 mg/day, serious adverse effects included death (3), pulmonary edema (3), and symptomatic hypotension (5)
Managing Constipation

Constipation is the most common side effect unique to verapamil among CCBs. It results from calcium channel blockade in GI smooth muscle, reducing peristalsis. Proactive management is recommended from initiation: increased dietary fibre (25–30 g/day), adequate fluid intake (1.5–2 L/day), and regular physical activity. Osmotic laxatives (polyethylene glycol) or stool softeners (docusate) may be used if dietary measures are insufficient. If constipation is severe or if paralytic ileus develops, consider switching to diltiazem (which causes constipation at a much lower rate) or to a dihydropyridine CCB.

Int

Drug Interactions

Verapamil is both a substrate and moderate inhibitor of CYP3A4, CYP1A2, CYP2C, and P-glycoprotein. Combined with its potent cardiac depressant properties, verapamil has one of the most extensive drug interaction profiles among cardiovascular medications. Particular vigilance is required with drugs that affect cardiac conduction, contractility, or are CYP3A4 substrates with narrow therapeutic indices.

MajorDantrolene (IV)
MechanismPharmacodynamic synergism
EffectCardiovascular collapse and marked hyperkalemia reported
ManagementContraindicated; do not co-administer
FDA PI
MajorBeta-Blockers (IV)
MechanismAdditive negative inotropy, chronotropy, and dromotropy
EffectSerious adverse reactions reported, especially in severe cardiomyopathy, CHF, or recent MI
ManagementIV beta-blocker + IV verapamil is contraindicated; oral combination may be used cautiously in selected patients with close monitoring
FDA PI
MajorDigoxin
MechanismP-gp inhibition and reduced renal/extrarenal clearance
EffectDigoxin serum levels increased 50–75%; additive AV nodal depression
ManagementReduce digoxin dose by 33–50% when starting verapamil; monitor digoxin levels and ECG closely
FDA PI
MajorSimvastatin / Lovastatin
MechanismCYP3A4 inhibition by verapamil reduces statin metabolism
EffectSignificantly increased statin exposure; risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis
ManagementLimit simvastatin to 10 mg/day; limit lovastatin to 40 mg/day; pravastatin, rosuvastatin, or fluvastatin are preferred alternatives
FDA PI
MajorRifampin
MechanismPotent CYP3A4 induction
EffectReduces verapamil bioavailability by up to 97%; near-total loss of therapeutic effect
ManagementAvoid combination; use alternative antihypertensive or rate-control agent
FDA PI
ModerateCyclosporine
MechanismCYP3A4 and P-gp inhibition by verapamil
EffectIncreased cyclosporine levels; risk of nephrotoxicity
ManagementMonitor cyclosporine trough levels; reduce dose as needed
FDA PI
ModerateCarbamazepine
MechanismCYP3A4 inhibition by verapamil
EffectIncreased carbamazepine levels; risk of neurotoxicity (ataxia, diplopia, nystagmus)
ManagementMonitor carbamazepine levels; dose reduction may be necessary
FDA PI
ModerateTheophylline
MechanismCYP1A2 inhibition by verapamil reduces theophylline clearance
EffectTheophylline levels increased ~20%; risk of theophylline toxicity
ManagementMonitor theophylline levels; adjust dose as needed
FDA PI
ModerateAlcohol
MechanismVerapamil inhibits alcohol metabolism and may increase bioavailability
EffectIncreased blood alcohol concentrations and prolonged alcohol effects; increased risk of hypotension and dizziness
ManagementCounsel patients to limit or avoid alcohol during verapamil therapy
FDA PI
ModerateLithium
MechanismPharmacodynamic interaction; verapamil may both increase and decrease lithium levels
EffectIncreased sensitivity to lithium neurotoxicity reported
ManagementMonitor lithium levels and neurological status closely
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Blood PressureBaseline, each titration, regularly
    Routine
    Monitor seated and standing. Verapamil can cause symptomatic hypotension (2.5% in trials). Close surveillance during initial titration and when adding concurrent antihypertensives.
  • Heart Rate & ECGBaseline, each titration, periodically
    Routine
    PR interval prolongation correlates with verapamil plasma concentration during early titration. ECG mandatory before initiation and during IV administration. Monitor for bradycardia, AV block, and widening PR interval.
  • Liver Function TestsPeriodically; trigger-based
    Routine
    FDA PI recommends periodic LFT monitoring. Hepatocellular injury has been proven by rechallenge in several cases. Check if jaundice, malaise, fever, or RUQ pain develops.
  • Bowel FunctionEach visit
    Routine
    Constipation occurs in 7.3% of patients. Proactively assess and manage. Rare cases of paralytic ileus reported; evaluate any new-onset abdominal distension or vomiting.
  • Digoxin LevelsAt initiation and dose changes
    Trigger-based
    Verapamil increases digoxin levels 50–75%. Reduce digoxin dose empirically and monitor levels closely.
  • Signs of Heart FailureEach visit
    Routine
    CHF/pulmonary edema occurred in 1.8% of patients. Assess for dyspnea, weight gain, JVD, peripheral edema. Risk higher when combined with beta-blockers or in patients with impaired LV function.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Severe left ventricular dysfunction (unless HF is secondary to a supraventricular arrhythmia amenable to verapamil)
  • Hypotension (systolic BP <90 mmHg) or cardiogenic shock
  • Sick sinus syndrome without a functioning ventricular pacemaker
  • Second- or third-degree AV block without a functioning ventricular pacemaker
  • Atrial fibrillation/flutter with an accessory bypass tract (WPW, LGL) — risk of ventricular fibrillation
  • Known or suspected ventricular tachycardia — administration may cause hemodynamic collapse
  • Concurrent IV beta-blocker (for IV verapamil) — severe bradycardia, AV block, asystole, or cardiac arrest
  • IV dantrolene — cardiovascular collapse and hyperkalemia (contraindicated)
  • Hypersensitivity to verapamil or other CCBs

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Moderate LV dysfunction (EF 30–40%) — negative inotropic effect may precipitate or worsen heart failure
  • Wide-complex tachycardia of uncertain origin — if the rhythm is VT, verapamil can cause cardiovascular collapse
  • Moderate to severe hepatic impairment — clearance reduced to ~30%, dramatically prolonged half-life
  • Neuromuscular diseases (e.g., myasthenia gravis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy) — may worsen neuromuscular transmission

Use with Caution

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy — higher adverse event rates documented (deaths, pulmonary edema, hypotension) at doses up to 720 mg/day in a 120-patient study
  • Concurrent oral beta-blockers — additive cardiac depression; use only with close monitoring
  • Concurrent digoxin — levels increase 50–75%; reduce digoxin dose proactively
  • Elderly patients — prolonged half-life; greater sensitivity to negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects
FDA Safety Advisory Life-Threatening Arrhythmias with Accessory Pathways

A small fraction (<1%) of patients treated with IV verapamil may develop life-threatening adverse responses. In patients with atrial fibrillation or flutter and an accessory AV pathway (WPW syndrome, LGL syndrome), verapamil can paradoxically accelerate conduction down the accessory pathway, resulting in a rapid ventricular response that may degenerate into ventricular fibrillation. IV verapamil should only be administered in settings with monitoring, resuscitation facilities, and DC cardioversion capability. Before administering IV verapamil for a wide-complex tachycardia, the arrhythmia must be confirmed as supraventricular in origin.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Verapamil is prescribed to lower blood pressure, prevent chest pain (angina), or control heart rhythm. It works by relaxing blood vessels and slowing the heart’s electrical signals. For blood pressure and angina, daily use provides ongoing protection. For heart rhythm problems, it helps keep the heart beating at a normal, steady rate.

How to Take

Immediate-release tablets are taken two to three times daily. Extended-release tablets or capsules (SR, ER, PM) are taken once or twice daily depending on the formulation. Some formulations (Calan SR) should be taken with food; others (Verelan PM, Covera-HS) are taken at bedtime. Never crush or chew extended-release products. Verelan capsules may be opened and sprinkled on a spoonful of applesauce; swallow immediately without chewing.

Constipation
Tell patientConstipation is the most common side effect of verapamil. Increasing dietary fibre (fruits, vegetables, whole grains), drinking plenty of water, and staying physically active can help prevent it. Over-the-counter stool softeners may also be used. This side effect is usually mild and manageable.
Call prescriberIf constipation is severe, does not respond to home measures, or is accompanied by abdominal distension, vomiting, or inability to pass gas (may indicate a more serious bowel problem).
Slow Heart Rate
Tell patientVerapamil intentionally slows the heart rate, which is part of how it works. A resting pulse rate of 50–60 bpm is often expected and not dangerous. Learn to check your own pulse so you can detect any significant changes.
Call prescriberIf your resting pulse drops below 50 bpm, or if you feel faint, very dizzy, extremely tired, or short of breath.
Dizziness & Low Blood Pressure
Tell patientDizziness may occur as blood pressure lowers, particularly when standing up quickly. Rise slowly from sitting or lying positions, especially during the first days of treatment or after a dose change.
Call prescriberIf dizziness is persistent, severe, or accompanied by fainting.
Alcohol
Tell patientVerapamil can increase the effects of alcohol, making you feel more intoxicated than expected from the same amount. It may also increase the blood alcohol level itself. Limit or avoid alcohol while taking this medication.
Call prescriberIf you experience unusually severe dizziness, sedation, or nausea after even small amounts of alcohol.
Liver Warning Signs
Tell patientRarely, verapamil can affect the liver. Watch for yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, persistent nausea, unusual tiredness, or pain in the upper right abdomen.
Call prescriberImmediately if any of these symptoms develop.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Calan (verapamil HCl) Tablets. Full Prescribing Information. Pfizer Inc. Revised 2017. accessdata.fda.gov FDA label for IR tablets (Calan); source of angina/HTN dosing, PK data, adverse effect incidence (N=4,954), and drug interactions.
  2. Calan SR (verapamil HCl) Sustained-Release Tablets. Full Prescribing Information. Pfizer Inc. Revised 2020. accessdata.fda.gov FDA label for SR tablets; source of HTN dosing, SR-specific PK (food effect, Tmax), and formulation-specific guidance.
  3. Verelan PM (verapamil HCl) Extended-Release Capsules. Full Prescribing Information. Revised 2011. accessdata.fda.gov FDA label for bedtime ER capsules; source of Verelan PM dosing, hypotension incidence (1.7%), and comprehensive adverse event tables.
  4. Calan (verapamil HCl) for Intravenous Injection. Full Prescribing Information. Revised 2016. accessdata.fda.gov FDA label for IV formulation; source of IV bolus dosing, pediatric dosing, accessory pathway warnings, and acute adverse reaction management.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. The Danish Verapamil Infarction Trial II (DAVIT-II). Effect of verapamil on mortality and major events after acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol. 1990;66(10):779-785. doi:10.1016/0002-9149(90)90351-Z RCT showing verapamil reduced mortality and reinfarction rate in post-MI patients without heart failure, establishing role in selected secondary prevention.
  2. Pepine CJ, Handberg EM, Cooper-DeHoff RM, et al. A calcium antagonist vs a non-calcium antagonist hypertension treatment strategy for patients with coronary artery disease: the INVEST randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2003;290(21):2805-2816. doi:10.1001/jama.290.21.2805 Major outcomes trial (22,576 patients) demonstrating verapamil-trandolapril strategy was equivalent to atenolol-HCTZ strategy for cardiovascular events in hypertensive CAD patients.
Guidelines
  1. Whelton PK, Carey RM, Aronow WS, et al. 2017 ACC/AHA guideline for the prevention, detection, evaluation, and management of high blood pressure in adults. Hypertension. 2018;71(6):e13-e115. doi:10.1161/HYP.0000000000000065 Current US hypertension guideline; non-DHP CCBs are second-line for HTN but first-line for concurrent rate control needs in AF.
  2. January CT, Wann LS, Calkins H, et al. 2019 AHA/ACC/HRS focused update of the 2014 guideline for management of patients with atrial fibrillation. Circulation. 2019;140(2):e125-e151. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000665 Guideline recommending verapamil and diltiazem as first-line rate-control agents for AF in patients without HFrEF.
  3. Silberstein SD, Holland S, Freitag F, et al. Evidence-based guideline update: pharmacologic treatment for episodic migraine prevention in adults. Neurology. 2012;78(17):1337-1345. doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182535d20 AAN guideline classifying verapamil as a Level B (probably effective) agent for episodic migraine prevention.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Hockerman GH, Peterson BZ, Johnson BD, Catterall WA. Molecular determinants of drug binding and action on L-type calcium channels. Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol. 1997;37:361-396. doi:10.1146/annurev.pharmtox.37.1.361 Definitive review of L-type calcium channel binding pharmacology; describes verapamil’s phenylalkylamine binding site distinct from dihydropyridine and benzothiazepine sites.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Abernethy DR, Schwartz JB, Todd EL, Luchi R, Snow E. Verapamil pharmacodynamics and disposition in young and elderly hypertensive patients. Ann Intern Med. 1986;105(3):329-336. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-105-3-329 Key PK study demonstrating increased verapamil sensitivity in elderly patients with prolonged half-life and greater ECG effects at comparable plasma levels.
  2. McAllister RG Jr, Hamann SR, Blouin RA. Pharmacokinetics of calcium-entry blockers. Am J Cardiol. 1985;55(3):30B-40B. doi:10.1016/0002-9149(85)90609-3 Comparative PK review of calcium channel blockers establishing verapamil’s non-linear kinetics, extensive first-pass metabolism, and norverapamil pharmacology.
  3. Fahie S, Cassagnol M. Verapamil. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2026. Updated February 6, 2023. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Comprehensive overview of verapamil pharmacology, dosing across formulations, adverse effects, drug interactions, and clinical monitoring.