Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMLODIPINE BESYLATE BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE versus ZESTORETIC.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMLODIPINE BESYLATE BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE versus ZESTORETIC.
AMLODIPINE BESYLATE; BENAZEPRIL HYDROCHLORIDE vs ZESTORETIC
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.
Combination of lisinopril (ACE inhibitor) and hydrochlorothiazide (thiazide diuretic). Lisinopril inhibits angiotensin-converting enzyme, reducing angiotensin II formation, decreasing vasoconstriction and aldosterone secretion. Hydrochlorothiazide inhibits sodium reabsorption in distal convoluted tubule, increasing diuresis and reducing plasma volume.
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.
Zestoretic (lisinopril/hydrochlorothiazide) is available in fixed-dose combinations. Typical adult dose: 10 mg/12.5 mg, 20 mg/12.5 mg, or 20 mg/25 mg orally once daily. Maximum dose: lisinopril 80 mg/day, hydrochlorothiazide 50 mg/day.
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.
Lisinopril: terminal half-life approximately 12 hours (accumulation half-life 13.8 hours in patients with normal renal function). Hydrochlorothiazide: terminal half-life 5.6–14.8 hours (mean 9.6 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.
Lisinopril is excreted unchanged in urine; 100% renal elimination. Hydrochlorothiazide is excreted primarily by the kidney (≥95% as unchanged drug) via tubular secretion.
Category D/X
Category C
ACE Inhibitor
ACE Inhibitor + Diuretic