Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: APRESOLINE ESIDRIX versus EXFORGE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: APRESOLINE ESIDRIX versus EXFORGE.
APRESOLINE-ESIDRIX vs EXFORGE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Apresoline (hydralazine) is a direct-acting vasodilator that relaxes arteriolar smooth muscle via unknown mechanism; Esidrix (hydrochlorothiazide) is a thiazide diuretic that inhibits sodium and chloride reabsorption in the distal convoluted tubule.
Exforge is a combination of amlodipine, a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, and valsartan, an angiotensin II receptor blocker. Amlodipine inhibits calcium influx across cardiac and vascular smooth muscle cell membranes, causing vasodilation. Valsartan selectively blocks the binding of angiotensin II to AT1 receptors, leading to vasodilation and reduced aldosterone secretion.
Hydralazine (Apresoline): Oral, initial 10 mg 4 times daily for first 2-4 days, then increase to 25 mg 4 times daily for first week, then 50 mg 4 times daily thereafter. Maximum daily dose: 300 mg. Hydrochlorothiazide (Esidrix): Oral, initial 12.5-25 mg once daily, may increase to 50 mg once daily if needed.
One tablet orally once daily. Initial dose: 5/160 mg or 5/320 mg. Titrate based on blood pressure response. Maximum dose: 10/320 mg once daily.
None Documented
None Documented
Hydralazine: 2-8 h (prolonged in renal impairment); Hydrochlorothiazide: 6-15 h (mean 10 h, increased in renal failure).
Amlodipine: terminal elimination half-life is 30-50 hours (mean ~35 h), supporting once-daily dosing. Valsartan: terminal half-life is approximately 6 hours, with the combination product dosed once daily due to amlodipine's long half-life.
Renal: Hydralazine 85-90% as metabolites, 5-10% unchanged; Hydrochlorothiazide 95% as unchanged drug. Biliary/fecal: Hydralazine <10%.
Valsartan is primarily eliminated via biliary excretion (83%) in feces as unchanged drug; renal excretion accounts for 13% (mostly unchanged). Amlodipine is extensively metabolized in the liver, with 60% of metabolites excreted renally and 20-25% in feces as unchanged drug.
Category C
Category C
Antihypertensive
Antihypertensive