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Registry Hub
Peer-Reviewed Evidence
HomeDrug RegistryCompareCRYSTODIGIN vs ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Comparative Pharmacology

CRYSTODIGIN vs ATROPINE AND DEMEROL Comparison

Head-to-head clinical analysis & difference comparison: details on mechanism of action, dosing, half-life, interactions, and maternal-fetal safety.

Clinical EssentialsPharmacokineticsSpecial PopulationsSafety & MonitoringPregnancy & LactationClinical Insights
Differential Analysis

CRYSTODIGIN vs ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Clinician-reviewed, head-to-head comparison of mechanism, dosing, pharmacokinetics, and safety profiles.

View CRYSTODIGIN Monograph View ATROPINE AND DEMEROL Monograph
CRYSTODIGIN
Cardiac Glycoside
Category C
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Opioid Analgesic Combination
Category C
TL;DR — Key Differences
  • Drug class: CRYSTODIGIN is a Cardiac Glycoside; ATROPINE AND DEMEROL is a Opioid Analgesic Combination.
  • Half-life: CRYSTODIGIN has a half-life of Terminal elimination half-life approximately 1.6–1.9 days (38–45 hours) in patients with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment.; ATROPINE AND DEMEROL has Atropine: 2-4 hours (terminal half-life). Demerol: 2.5-4 hours; normeperidine metabolite half-life 15-30 hours (accumulates in renal impairment)..
  • No direct drug-drug interaction has been documented between CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL.
  • Pregnancy: CRYSTODIGIN is rated Category C; ATROPINE AND DEMEROL is rated Category C.

Last clinically reviewed: July 2026 · OpiCalc Medical Review Team

Clinical Essentials

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Mechanism of Action
CRYSTODIGIN

Cardiac glycoside that inhibits the Na+/K+-ATPase pump, leading to increased intracellular sodium, which in turn promotes calcium influx via the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger, resulting in increased myocardial contractility (positive inotropy). It also has negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects via vagomimetic action.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine is an antimuscarinic agent that competitively blocks acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors, reducing secretions and gastrointestinal motility. Meperidine (Demerol) is an opioid agonist that binds to mu-opioid receptors in the CNS, altering pain perception and producing analgesia.

Indications
CRYSTODIGIN

Treatment of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (FDA-approved),Control of ventricular response in atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter (FDA-approved)

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Preanesthetic medication to reduce secretions and prevent bradycardia,Management of moderate to severe pain (as an opioid analgesic),Off-label: treatment of opioid-induced constipation (meperidine component)

Standard Dosing
CRYSTODIGIN

0.5 mg intravenously over 2-4 hours, then 0.25 mg every 6 hours as needed up to a total of 1.5 mg in 24 hours.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine 0.4 mg and Demerol (meperidine) 50-100 mg intramuscularly as preanesthetic medication 30-60 minutes before procedure.

Direct Interaction
CRYSTODIGIN
No Direct Interaction
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
No Direct Interaction

Pharmacokinetics

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Half-Life
CRYSTODIGIN

Terminal elimination half-life approximately 1.6–1.9 days (38–45 hours) in patients with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: 2-4 hours (terminal half-life). Demerol: 2.5-4 hours; normeperidine metabolite half-life 15-30 hours (accumulates in renal impairment).

Metabolism
CRYSTODIGIN

Primarily renal excretion; minimal hepatic metabolism. Not significantly metabolized by cytochrome P450 enzymes.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Meperidine is primarily metabolized in the liver via hydrolysis to meperidinic acid and via N-demethylation to normeperidine (active metabolite), involving CYP3A4 and CYP2B6. Atropine is metabolized in the liver via hydrolysis and glucuronidation; approximately 50% is excreted unchanged in urine.

Excretion
CRYSTODIGIN

Primarily renal excretion of unchanged drug; ~80-90% eliminated in urine, ~10-20% in feces via biliary excretion.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: approximately 50% excreted unchanged in urine, remainder as metabolites (biliary and renal). Demerol (meperidine): primarily hepatic metabolism; <5% excreted unchanged in urine; metabolites (including normeperidine) excreted renally.

Protein Binding
CRYSTODIGIN

~20–25% bound to plasma proteins, primarily albumin.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: ~44% bound to albumin and alpha-1 acid glycoprotein. Demerol: ~60% bound to albumin and alpha-1 acid glycoprotein.

VD (L/kg)
CRYSTODIGIN

Vd approximately 5–10 L/kg, indicating extensive tissue distribution; clinical significance: large Vd means low plasma concentration relative to total body load, necessitating loading doses.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: 1-3 L/kg (large, extensive tissue distribution). Demerol: 3-5 L/kg (large, distributes widely including CNS).

Bioavailability
CRYSTODIGIN

Oral: 60–80% (variable, depends on formulation and gastrointestinal factors); Intravenous: 100%.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: oral ~10-25% (extensive first-pass metabolism). Demerol: oral ~50-60% (significant first-pass metabolism). IM/IV 100%.

Special Populations

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Renal Adjustments
CRYSTODIGIN

Cr Cl 10-50 m L/min: reduce dose by 25-50%; Cr Cl <10 m L/min: reduce dose by 50-75% or use alternative.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Meperidine: GFR 10-50 m L/min: administer 75% of normal dose; GFR <10 m L/min: administer 50% of normal dose and avoid due to normeperidine accumulation. Atropine: no adjustment required.

Hepatic Adjustments
CRYSTODIGIN

Child-Pugh class B: reduce dose by 50%; Child-Pugh class C: avoid use.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Meperidine: Child-Pugh A: reduce dose by 25%; Child-Pugh B: reduce by 50%; Child-Pugh C: contraindicated. Atropine: caution in severe hepatic impairment.

Pediatric Dosing
CRYSTODIGIN

Loading dose: 10-20 mcg/kg intravenously over 2-4 hours; maintenance: 5-10 mcg/kg every 6 hours as needed.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine 0.01 mg/kg (max 0.4 mg) and meperidine 1-2 mg/kg (max 100 mg) intramuscularly 30-60 minutes before procedure.

Geriatric Dosing
CRYSTODIGIN

Start at lower end of dosing range (0.25 mg intravenously), adjust based on renal function and response, monitor for toxicity.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Reduce meperidine dose by 50% and avoid in elderly due to risk of seizures and delirium; use alternative opioids. Atropine dose unchanged but monitor for anticholinergic effects.

Safety & Monitoring

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Black Box Warnings
CRYSTODIGIN
FDA Black Box Warning

None.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
FDA Black Box Warning

Meperidine has a boxed warning for risk of respiratory depression, especially in elderly, cachectic, or debilitated patients, and when used with CNS depressants. Also, risk of serotonin syndrome when co-administered with serotonergic drugs, and risk of abuse, addiction, and diversion.

Warnings/Precautions
CRYSTODIGIN

Narrow therapeutic index; toxicity can be life-threatening.,Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, and hypercalcemia increase risk of digoxin toxicity.,Electrolyte monitoring and dose adjustment in renal impairment.,Patients with acute myocardial infarction, myocarditis, or severe pulmonary disease may be at increased risk of arrhythmias.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Respiratory depression, hypotension, bradycardia, urinary retention, constipation, serotonin syndrome, seizures (normeperidine accumulation), decreased GI motility, drug dependence, and tolerance. Use caution in elderly, renal impairment, hepatic impairment, respiratory disorders, prostatic hyperplasia, glaucoma, and with concurrent CNS depressants.

Contraindications
CRYSTODIGIN

Ventricular fibrillation,Known hypersensitivity to digoxin or other digitalis glycosides,Hypercalcemia,Hypokalemia (uncorrected),Atrioventricular block (second- or third-degree) unless a pacemaker is present,Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (relative contraindication)

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Hypersensitivity to atropine or meperidine; severe asthma or COPD; acute respiratory depression; paralytic ileus; known or suspected gastrointestinal obstruction; patients receiving MAOIs (within 14 days); myasthenia gravis (relative for atropine); increased intraocular pressure (glaucoma); severe renal impairment (normeperidine accumulation).

Adverse Reactions
CRYSTODIGIN
Data Pending
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Data Pending
Food Interactions
CRYSTODIGIN

Avoid high-fiber foods and large amounts of bran or pectin, as they may reduce absorption. Grapefruit juice may increase blood levels; limit consumption. Consistent dietary potassium intake is important; extremes (high or low) can affect drug action.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Avoid alcohol. Meperidine may interact with foods containing tyramine (aged cheeses, cured meats) in patients on MAOIs; otherwise no significant food interactions.

Pregnancy & Lactation

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Teratogenic Risk
CRYSTODIGIN

Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: Association with fetal cardiac glycoside toxicity and malformations in animal studies; limited human data. Second trimester: Potential for fetal bradycardia and hypoxia due to placental transfer. Third trimester: Risk of neonatal digitalis toxicity, including arrhythmias and heart block.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: FDA Pregnancy Category C. Crosses placenta; may cause fetal tachycardia. Demerol (meperidine): FDA Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: limited human data; animal studies show no teratogenicity. Second trimester: no specific risks. Third trimester: use near term may cause neonatal respiratory depression, decreased Apgar scores, and withdrawal symptoms. Chronic use may lead to neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS).

Lactation Summary
CRYSTODIGIN

Excreted in breast milk in low concentrations (M/P ratio approximately 0.75-1.0). Considered compatible with breastfeeding; monitor infant for signs of toxicity (bradycardia, vomiting).

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: Excreted in breast milk in small amounts; may inhibit lactation. M/P ratio not established. Use with caution; monitor infant for anticholinergic effects (tachycardia, dry mouth). Demerol: Excreted in breast milk; relative infant dose (RID) ~0.5-0.8% of maternal weight-adjusted dose. M/P ratio 1.0-1.6. Limited data; avoid in breastfeeding due to potential neonatal sedation and respiratory depression. American Academy of Pediatrics considers meperidine compatible but caution advised.

Pregnancy Dosing
CRYSTODIGIN

Increased volume of distribution and renal clearance in second and third trimesters may necessitate dose increases. Monitor serum digoxin levels and adjust to maintain therapeutic range (0.5-1.0 ng/m L).

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine: No specific dose adjustments recommended; increased volume of distribution may require higher doses for effect. Demerol: Increased clearance and volume of distribution in pregnancy; standard doses may be less effective. Avoid use during labor due to risk of neonatal respiratory depression; if necessary, use lowest effective dose and monitor neonate. No specific dose reduction recommended, but caution with repeated doses.

Maternal Safety Status
CRYSTODIGIN
Category C
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Category C

Clinical Insights

CRYSTODIGIN
ATROPINE AND DEMEROL
Clinical Pearls
CRYSTODIGIN

Crystodigin (digitoxin) has a very long half-life (~5-7 days) requiring careful monitoring to avoid accumulation. Unlike digoxin, it is primarily hepatically metabolized, so renal impairment has less impact on dosing. Always check for drug interactions with CYP3A4 inducers/inhibitors. Therapeutic monitoring of serum levels is essential (target 15-25 ng/m L).

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

Atropine and Demerol (meperidine) combination is used for pre-anesthetic medication to reduce secretions and produce sedation. Monitor for CNS depression, respiratory depression, and anticholinergic effects (tachycardia, dry mouth, urinary retention). Use cautiously in elderly, patients with COPD, asthma, or prostatic hyperplasia. Avoid in patients with MAOIs due to risk of serotonin syndrome.

Patient Counseling
CRYSTODIGIN

Take exactly as prescribed; do not miss doses or double up.,Report any symptoms of toxicity: nausea, vomiting, visual disturbances (yellow-green halos), or irregular heartbeat.,Avoid over-the-counter medications without consulting your doctor, especially antacids and laxatives.,Keep regular appointments for blood tests to monitor drug levels and kidney function.,Do not stop suddenly; withdrawal can worsen heart condition.

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL

This medication may cause drowsiness, dizziness, or blurred vision; avoid driving or operating machinery until effects are known.,Avoid alcohol and other CNS depressants while taking this medication.,Report difficulty urinating, fast heartbeat, or severe constipation to your healthcare provider.,Do not take more than prescribed; risk of dependence with long-term use.,Keep out of reach of children; may cause serious breathing problems if accidentally taken.

Safety Verification

Known Interactions

CRYSTODIGIN Risks

No interactions on record

ATROPINE AND DEMEROL Risks3
Rivastigmine + Atropine
moderate

"Rivastigmine, a reversible carbamate acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, increases synaptic acetylcholine levels, enhancing cholinergic transmission. Atropine, a competitive antagonist of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, blocks the effects of acetylcholine at these receptors, leading to reduced parasympathetic activity. When used together, atropine can diminish the therapeutic efficacy of rivastigmine by pharmacodynamically antagonizing its cholinergic effects, particularly in the central nervous system and peripheral muscarinic receptors, potentially worsening cognitive function in Alzheimer's disease patients."

Umeclidinium + Atropine
moderate

"Umeclidinium, a long-acting muscarinic antagonist (LAMA), and atropine, a non-selective muscarinic antagonist, both block the action of acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors in the parasympathetic nervous system. Their co-administration leads to additive anticholinergic effects, resulting in an increased risk of peripheral anticholinergic adverse effects such as dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, urinary retention, and tachycardia, as well as central nervous system effects like confusion or delirium, especially in elderly patients. Clinically, this combination may also exacerbate conditions such as angle-closure glaucoma or paralytic ileus."

Atropine + Gallamine triethiodide
moderate

"Concurrent use of atropine and gallamine triethiodide results in additive antagonism at muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, leading to enhanced blockade of parasympathetic effects and increased risk of tachycardia, hypertension, and delirium. Atropine, a competitive antagonist of muscarinic receptors, counteracts the vagolytic effects of gallamine, a nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocker that also exhibits weak vagolytic activity. This pharmacodynamic interaction can cause severe sinus tachycardia, hypertension, and central anticholinergic syndrome, especially in elderly patients or those with cardiovascular disease."

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Clinical Q&A

Frequently Asked Questions

Common clinical questions about CRYSTODIGIN vs ATROPINE AND DEMEROL, answered by our medical review team.

1. What is the main difference between CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL?

CRYSTODIGIN is a Cardiac Glycoside that works by Cardiac glycoside that inhibits the Na+/K+-ATPase pump, leading to increased intracellular sodium, which in turn promotes calcium influx via the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger, resulting in increased myocardial contractility (positive inotropy). It also has negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects via vagomimetic action.. ATROPINE AND DEMEROL is a Opioid Analgesic Combination that works by Atropine is an antimuscarinic agent that competitively blocks acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors, reducing secretions and gastrointestinal motility. Meperidine (Demerol) is an opioid agonist that binds to mu-opioid receptors in the CNS, altering pain perception and producing analgesia.. They differ in pharmacokinetic profiles, FDA-approved indications, and side effect profiles.

2. Which is stronger: CRYSTODIGIN or ATROPINE AND DEMEROL?

Potency comparisons between CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL depend on the specific clinical indication. These are agents from distinct pharmacological classes and are not directly interchangeable by dose. A physician or clinical pharmacist should guide any therapeutic switching decisions.

3. What is the standard dosing for CRYSTODIGIN vs ATROPINE AND DEMEROL?

The standard adult dose of CRYSTODIGIN is: 0.5 mg intravenously over 2-4 hours, then 0.25 mg every 6 hours as needed up to a total of 1.5 mg in 24 hours.. The standard adult dose of ATROPINE AND DEMEROL is: Atropine 0.4 mg and Demerol (meperidine) 50-100 mg intramuscularly as preanesthetic medication 30-60 minutes before procedure.. Dosing should always be individualized based on indication, renal and hepatic function, age, and other patient factors.

4. Can you take CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL together?

No direct drug-drug interaction has been formally documented between CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL in current clinical databases. However, individual patient risk factors including other medications, organ function, and comorbidities should always be evaluated by a qualified healthcare provider.

5. Are CRYSTODIGIN and ATROPINE AND DEMEROL safe during pregnancy?

The maternal-fetal safety profiles differ. CRYSTODIGIN is classified as Category C. Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: Association with fetal cardiac glycoside toxicity and malformations in animal studies; limited human data. Second trimester: Potential for fe. ATROPINE AND DEMEROL is classified as Category C. Atropine: FDA Pregnancy Category C. Crosses placenta; may cause fetal tachycardia. Demerol (meperidine): FDA Pregnancy Category C. First trimester: limited human data; animal studi. Always consult a maternal-fetal medicine specialist before taking either drug during pregnancy or lactation.