1959 as an antihypertensive agent, 1 there have been numerous reports of its side effects, and it has been recommended that the drug be used only in severe hypertension when treatment with other drugs has failed. 5 ' 3 More recent reports, however, have called attention to the outstanding absence of significant toxic or allergic effects attributable to guanethidine, and have also challenged the common belief that treatment of moderate hypertension with the drug is accompanied by an intolerably high incidence of side effects. Mild to moderate sinus bradycardia, not requiring drug discontinuation, has been well documented as a not infrequent side effect of guanethidine. 8 " 9 We wish to report the case of a patient receiving guanethidine who developed episodes of dizziness and blurred vision due to severe sinus bradycardia with episodes of prolonged sinus arrest. These phenomena disappeared with discontinuation of guanethidine and reappeared upon challenge with the drug. Sinus node dysfunction, in such an extreme form, has not previously been so conclusively related to guanethidine.Case Report A 65-year-old man was admitted to the hospital following an episode of weakness, dizziness, and blurred vision. He had never experienced such symptoms previously. He was known to be hypertensive for at least 8 years, and had suffered a myocardial infarction 4 years prior to admission. His blood pressure had been treated initially with reserpine, then with alpha methyldopa, and finally, for the 12 months preceeding admission, with guanethidine, 75 mg once daily, and furosemide, 40 mg twice daily. He was not receiving any other medication.On examination the patient was quite obese (121 kg) and in no distress. Supine blood pressure was 150/90 with a pulse rate of 35 beats per minute (bpm) and slightly irregular. He was afebrile. The lungs were clear, the heart not palpably enlarged, and there were 543