Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMLODIPINE BESYLATE BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE versus VASERETIC.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMLODIPINE BESYLATE BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE versus VASERETIC.
AMLODIPINE BESYLATE; BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE vs VASERETIC
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Amlodipine is a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker that inhibits the influx of calcium ions into vascular smooth muscle and cardiac muscle, leading to vasodilation and reduced peripheral vascular resistance. Benazepril is an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor that prevents the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II, resulting in vasodilation, decreased aldosterone secretion, and reduced blood pressure.
Vaseretic is a combination of enalapril maleate (an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor) and hydrochlorothiazide (a thiazide diuretic). Enalapril inhibits ACE, reducing angiotensin II formation, decreasing aldosterone secretion, and lowering blood pressure. Hydrochlorothiazide increases sodium and chloride excretion by inhibiting the Na+-Cl- symporter in the distal convoluted tubule, leading to diuresis and vasodilation.
Oral, 1 capsule (amlodipine 2.5-10 mg / benazepril 10-40 mg) once daily. Start with amlodipine 2.5 mg / benazepril 10 mg, titrate based on response.
One tablet (10 mg enalapril maleate/25 mg hydrochlorothiazide) orally once daily; may increase to 2 tablets daily if needed.
None Documented
None Documented
Amlodipine: terminal elimination half-life 30-50 hours (mean ~35 h), allowing once-daily dosing. Benazeprilat: effective half-life 10-11 hours; terminal half-life ~22 hours, with prolonged effects in renal impairment.
Enalaprilat: 35–38 hours (terminal). Clinically, effective half-life ~11 hours. Prolonged in renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min: up to 60 hours).
Amlodipine: ~90% metabolized to inactive metabolites, ~10% excreted unchanged in urine; metabolites excreted renally (~60%) and fecally (~20-25%). Benazepril: hydrolyzed to benazeprilat, which undergoes renal excretion (~33% as unchanged drug and metabolites) and biliary/fecal excretion (~33%), with the remainder via other routes.
Renal: 60% (enalaprilat); biliary/fecal: 33% (enalaprilat). Unchanged enalapril: <5% in urine.
Category D/X
Category C
ACE Inhibitor
ACE Inhibitor/Diuretic Combination