Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs)
Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs) inhibit the effects of Angiotensin II by selectively blocking the AT1 receptor.
They reduce systemic vascular resistance, aldosterone secretion, and pathologic cardiac remodeling.
ARBs are commonly used in: • Hypertension • Heart failure (HFrEF) • Chronic kidney disease • Post-myocardial infarction • Diabetic nephropathy
Mechanism of Action
• Block Angiotensin II Type 1 (AT1) receptors • Prevent vasoconstriction • Decrease aldosterone release • Reduce sympathetic activation
Effects:
• ↓ Systemic vascular resistance (afterload) • ↓ Sodium retention • ↓ Cardiac remodeling • ↓ Blood pressure
Unlike ACE Inhibitors, ARBs do NOT increase bradykinin.
Why ARBs Cause Less Cough
ACE inhibitors increase bradykinin levels. ARBs do not.
Result: • Much lower incidence of dry cough • Lower risk of angioedema (but not zero)
Indications
Hypertension
Heart Failure (HFrEF)
• Used when ACE inhibitors not tolerated • Reduce mortality and hospitalizations
Chronic Kidney Disease / Proteinuria
• Reduce intraglomerular pressure • Reduce proteinuria • Slow CKD progression
Post-Myocardial Infarction
• Used if ACE inhibitor intolerance • Prevent ventricular remodeling
Common ARBs
• Losartan • Valsartan • Candesartan • Irbesartan • Olmesartan • Telmisartan • Azilsartan
All ARBs share similar mechanism and outcome benefits.
Differences are largely pharmacokinetic.
Adverse Effects
• Hyperkalemia • Hypotension • Mild creatinine elevation • Rare angioedema
Compared to ACE inhibitors: • Less cough • Lower angioedema risk
Monitoring
Monitor:
• Serum creatinine • Potassium
Check labs 1–2 weeks after initiation or dose change.
A creatinine rise <30% is generally acceptable.
Contraindications
• Pregnancy • Bilateral renal artery stenosis • Concomitant ACE inhibitor use • Severe hyperkalemia
ACE Inhibitor vs ARB
ACE Inhibitors: • Block Angiotensin II production • Increase bradykinin • More cough
ARBs: • Block AT1 receptor • No bradykinin increase • Better tolerated
Both: • Reduce mortality in HFrEF • Protect kidneys in diabetes • First-line for hypertension
Clinical Pearls
✔ Equivalent BP reduction compared to ACE inhibitors ✔ Preferred if ACE inhibitor causes cough ✔ Monitor potassium carefully ✔ Do NOT combine with ACE inhibitors ✔ Core therapy in CKD and HFrEF
Related:
→ ACE Inhibitors → Hypertension Module → Heart Failure Module → Return to CV Modules
