Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUPIVACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE versus LIDOCAINE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUPIVACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE versus LIDOCAINE.
BUPIVACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE vs LIDOCAINE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Bupivacaine hydrochloride is an amide-type local anesthetic that blocks sodium ion channels in nerve cell membranes, thereby inhibiting the generation and propagation of action potentials and producing reversible local anesthesia.
Lidocaine is a sodium channel blocker that inhibits the influx of sodium ions into cardiac Purkinje fibers and myocytes, thereby stabilizing the neuronal membrane and decreasing automaticity. It also exhibits local anesthetic effects by reversibly binding to voltage-gated sodium channels in nerve cell membranes, blocking impulse conduction.
0.25% to 0.5% solution infiltrated locally, up to 175 mg (without epinephrine) or 225 mg (with epinephrine 1:200,000) per dose; maximum 400 mg per 24 hours. For epidural: 0.5% to 0.75% solution, 15-20 mL for surgical anesthesia.
For ventricular arrhythmias: IV bolus 1-1.5 mg/kg, then continuous infusion 1-4 mg/min. For local anesthesia: 0.5-2% solution, max 4.5 mg/kg (300 mg) without epinephrine, 7 mg/kg (500 mg) with epinephrine.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateLidocaine + Fluticasone propionate
"The risk or severity of adverse effects can be increased when Lidocaine is combined with Fluticasone propionate."
Clinical Note
moderateLidocaine + Tenofovir disoproxil
"The metabolism of Tenofovir disoproxil can be decreased when combined with Lidocaine."
Clinical Note
moderateLidocaine + Sulfisoxazole
"The metabolism of Sulfisoxazole can be decreased when combined with Lidocaine."
Clinical Note
moderateLidocaine + Erythromycin
Terminal elimination half-life: 2.7 hours (adults); prolonged in neonates (8.1 hours) and patients with hepatic impairment; clinical context: half-life increases with repeated dosing due to accumulation.
Terminal elimination half-life 1.5-2 hours (normal hepatic function). In CHF or hepatic impairment, prolonged to 6-8 hours; in neonates, 3-6 hours. Context: rapid redistribution after IV bolus (alpha half-life ~8 min) accounts for brief clinical effect, while terminal half-life determines accumulation with infusion.
Primarily hepatic metabolism (CYP3A4, CYP1A2, and amidases) to pipecoloxylidine and desbutylbupivacaine; less than 5% excreted unchanged in urine; negligible biliary/fecal excretion.
Renal excretion of metabolites: 4-hydroxyxylidine (70-80% renal, 10-20% biliary/fecal), unchanged lidocaine <10% renal. Total renal elimination ~90% (as metabolites), biliary/fecal ~10%.
Category C
Category A/B
Local Anesthetic
Local Anesthetic / Antiarrhythmic (Class Ib)
"The metabolism of Erythromycin can be decreased when combined with Lidocaine."