Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BREVIBLOC IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus LOPRESSOR.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BREVIBLOC IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus LOPRESSOR.
BREVIBLOC IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs LOPRESSOR
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Esmolol is a cardioselective beta-1 adrenergic receptor antagonist with minimal intrinsic sympathomimetic activity and membrane-stabilizing properties. At therapeutic doses, it blocks beta-1 receptors in the myocardium, decreasing heart rate, myocardial contractility, and AV conduction velocity, leading to reduced cardiac output and myocardial oxygen demand.
Selective beta-1 adrenergic receptor antagonist; reduces heart rate, myocardial contractility, and blood pressure by blocking catecholamine effects at beta-1 receptors, predominantly in cardiac tissue.
Initial loading dose: 500 mcg/kg IV over 1 minute, followed by continuous IV infusion of 50 mcg/kg/min for 4 minutes; if inadequate response, repeat loading dose and increase infusion by 50 mcg/kg/min increments up to 200 mcg/kg/min. Maintenance: 25-200 mcg/kg/min continuous IV infusion.
50 mg orally twice daily, titrate up to 100 mg twice daily as needed.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 9 minutes (range 4–15 minutes) for the parent drug, leading to rapid offset of effect. The half-life of the metabolite ASL-8123 is about 3.7 hours.
Terminal elimination half-life: 3-7 hours (mean 4.5 h); may be prolonged in hepatic impairment or elderly
Elimination primarily via red blood cell esterases; renal excretion of unchanged drug is less than 1% of dose. Metabolite ASL-8123 is inactive and renally excreted.
Renal: ~95% (primarily as metabolites, <5% unchanged); fecal: ~5%
Category C
Category C
Beta-Blocker
Beta-Blocker