Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DILT CD versus LEXXEL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DILT CD versus LEXXEL.
DILT-CD vs LEXXEL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Diltiazem inhibits calcium ion influx during depolarization of cardiac and vascular smooth muscle cells, thereby reducing intracellular calcium levels. It decreases sinoatrial and atrioventricular nodal conduction and dilates coronary and peripheral arteries.
LEXXEL is a combination of felodipine, a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker that inhibits calcium influx into vascular smooth muscle and cardiac muscle, causing vasodilation and reduced myocardial contractility, and enalapril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor that prevents conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II, reducing vasoconstriction, aldosterone secretion, and sodium reabsorption.
180-360 mg PO once daily (extended-release); 300-540 mg PO once daily for hypertension; 120-480 mg PO once daily for angina; IV: 0.25 mg/kg bolus over 2 min, then 5-15 mg/hr continuous infusion.
1 tablet (felodipine 5 mg / enalapril 5 mg) orally once daily, may increase to 2 tablets once daily after 2-4 weeks if needed.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life 7-10 hours; clinically relevant in hepatic impairment (prolonged to 14-20 hours) and in elderly
Enalapril: ~1.3 hours; Enalaprilat: terminal half-life ~35-38 hours, with multiple-dose accumulation half-life ~11 hours; effective half-life for ACE inhibition ~24 hours.
Renal 2-4% unchanged; extensive hepatic metabolism; 60-70% fecal, 30-40% renal as metabolites
Renal: ~35-50% as unchanged drug (enalaprilat), biliary/fecal: ~15-30% as metabolites and unchanged drug; total renal elimination of enalaprilat accounts for ~60-80% of dose.
Category C
Category C
Calcium Channel Blocker
ACE Inhibitor + Calcium Channel Blocker