Story + Education
Amlodipine After Liver Transplant
Hypertension is one of the most common long-term complications following liver transplantation. Amlodipine, a dihydropyridine calcium-channel blocker, has become a cornerstone therapy because it lowers blood pressure while preserving renal perfusion and graft blood flow [1] [2].
A Patient Story

Six months after liver transplantation, David noticed his blood pressure climbing despite feeling “otherwise well.” Tacrolimus levels were therapeutic, renal function stable, yet systolic pressures remained above 150 mmHg. His transplant team chose amlodipine—not because it was the strongest drug, but because it worked with his new liver rather than against it.

Within weeks, his blood pressure normalized without worsening kidney function or destabilizing immunosuppressant levels. This quiet success reflects why amlodipine is so frequently selected in transplant medicine [3].

Mechanism of Action
  • Blocks L-type calcium channels in vascular smooth muscle
  • Promotes arterial vasodilation with minimal cardiac depression
  • Counters calcineurin-inhibitor–induced vasoconstriction
  • Long half-life enables once-daily dosing without reflex tachycardia

Unlike non-dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers, amlodipine has minimal direct effect on cardiac conduction, making it safer in transplant patients [1].

Transplant-Specific Dosing
Clinical Context Recommended Dose Key Notes
Early post-transplant 2.5 mg daily Avoid hypotension; monitor tacrolimus
Stable outpatient 5 mg daily Most common maintenance dose
Resistant hypertension Up to 10 mg daily Assess edema; consider add-on therapy
Drug–Drug Interactions
Drug Interaction Clinical Action
Tacrolimus CYP3A4 inhibition may increase levels Check troughs after initiation
Cyclosporine Increased exposure possible Monitor renal function closely
Azole antifungals Potent CYP3A4 inhibition Lower amlodipine dose
Antihypertensive Comparison (Transplant)
Class Role Post-LT Limitations
CCBs (Amlodipine) First-line Edema
ACE-I / ARB Delayed use Hyperkalemia
Beta-blockers Adjunct Fatigue
Clinical Decision Pathway
  1. Confirm cause (CNI effect, volume, renal status)
  2. Start amlodipine 2.5–5 mg
  3. Monitor BP, edema, tacrolimus
  4. Add ACE-I/ARB only after renal stability
  5. Escalate or consult if resistant