Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CARDIZEM LA versus VERILOID.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CARDIZEM LA versus VERILOID.
CARDIZEM LA vs VERILOID
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Cardizem LA (diltiazem) is a calcium channel blocker that inhibits calcium ion influx across cardiac and smooth muscle cells during depolarization, leading to negative inotropic, chronotropic, and dromotropic effects. It dilates coronary and peripheral arteries, reducing systemic vascular resistance and myocardial oxygen demand.
VERILOID is a synthetic alkaloid that acts as a ganglionic blocker, inhibiting nicotinic acetylcholine receptors at autonomic ganglia, leading to reduced sympathetic and parasympathetic outflow. This results in vasodilation and decreased peripheral vascular resistance, lowering blood pressure.
Oral, 180-360 mg once daily; initiate at 180 mg once daily, titrate to 240 mg, then 300 mg, then 360 mg once daily as needed.
Intravenous: 0.1-0.5 mg/kg bolus, followed by 0.5-2 mcg/kg/min continuous infusion. Oral: 20-80 mg every 6-8 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life: 5-8 hours after oral administration. For extended-release formulations, the half-life is similar but the prolonged absorption phase results in sustained plasma concentrations.
Terminal elimination half-life is 3-5 hours, clinically relevant for dose scheduling to maintain steady-state levels.
Urine (2-4% unchanged, ~40% as metabolites); bile/feces (major route, ~60% as metabolites).
Renal excretion accounts for approximately 60% as unchanged drug; hepatic metabolism contributes 30% with biliary-fecal elimination of metabolites, totaling ~10% fecal.
Category C
Category C
Calcium Channel Blocker
Calcium Channel Blocker