Heart rate reduction plays a pivotal role in the management of myocardial ischemia and chronic stable angina. Rate-slowing drugs, such as beta-blockers are considered the cornerstone of antianginal therapy. However, the broad use of beta-blockers is limited by their side-effects. Ivabradine is the representative of a new class of agents that exclusively reduce heart rate through inhibition of the sinoatrial pacemaker (If) current. Ivabradine reduces cardiac heart rate in doses that do not affect other ionic currents, resulting in a decrease in cardiac oxygen consumption and in an increase in diastolic period. Ivabradine has no negative inotropic or lusitropic effects, and does not change any major electrophysiological parameter. Large rando...