Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BREVIBLOC DOUBLE STRENGTH IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TIMOLOL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BREVIBLOC DOUBLE STRENGTH IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TIMOLOL.
BREVIBLOC DOUBLE STRENGTH IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs TIMOLOL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Selective beta-1 adrenergic receptor antagonist; reduces heart rate, myocardial contractility, and blood pressure by blocking catecholamine effects at beta-1 receptors.
Nonselective beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist (beta-blocker) that competively blocks beta-1 and beta-2 receptors, reducing heart rate, contractility, and cardiac output. In glaucoma, decreases intraocular pressure by reducing aqueous humor production.
Intravenous: For stable patients, an initial loading dose of 500 mcg/kg/min over 1 minute followed by a maintenance infusion of 50 mcg/kg/min for 4 minutes; if response is inadequate, increase maintenance infusion to 100 mcg/kg/min and repeat loading dose after 10 minutes. Titrate in 50 mcg/kg/min increments up to 200 mcg/kg/min. For intraoperative and postoperative use, see full prescribing information.
0.25-0.5 mg ophthalmic solution instilled twice daily; for oral: 10-20 mg twice daily.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateTimolol + Digoxin
"Timolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Digoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateTimolol + Digitoxin
"Timolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Digitoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateTimolol + Deslanoside
"Timolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Deslanoside."
Clinical Note
moderateTimolol + Acetyldigitoxin
"Timolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Acetyldigitoxin."
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 9 minutes (range 8–10 minutes). Clinically, the half-life is consistent with rapid offset of effect upon discontinuation; steady state is achieved within 30 minutes of continuous infusion.
Terminal half-life: 4-5 hours (healthy adults); prolonged to 7-10 hours in renal impairment, 11-16 hours in hepatic impairment; clinical context: once-daily dosing for hypertension/glaucoma.
Primarily metabolized by red blood cell esterases; <1% excreted unchanged in urine. Elimination is not dependent on renal or hepatic function.
Renal: ~20% unchanged; hepatic metabolism accounts for ~80%, with metabolites excreted renally; minor biliary/fecal elimination (<5%).
Category C
Category A/B
Beta-Blocker
Beta-Blocker