Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DURANEST versus SYNERA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DURANEST versus SYNERA.
DURANEST vs SYNERA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Etonidate is an ultrashort-acting nonbarbiturate hypnotic agent that produces anesthesia by enhancing GABA-mediated chloride conductance at GABA-A receptors, leading to central nervous system depression.
Lidocaine is an amide-type local anesthetic that stabilizes neuronal membranes by inhibiting sodium ion influx, thereby blocking nerve impulse initiation and conduction. Tetracaine is an ester-type local anesthetic that similarly inhibits sodium channels. The combination provides local dermal anesthesia.
2-10 mL of a 1-2% solution, subarachnoid injection, single dose only.
Apply 1 patch (70 mg lidocaine and 70 mg tetracaine) to intact skin over the intended venipuncture site or superficial dermatologic procedure site 20-30 minutes prior to procedure; maximum 1 patch per procedure.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is 4.5 hours (range 3-6 hours). Clinical context: Prolonged in severe hepatic impairment but not significantly in renal impairment.
Lidocaine: 1.5–2 hours; prilocaine: 1–1.5 hours. Terminal half-life similar for both. Note: prolonged in hepatic impairment or neonates.
Primarily hepatic metabolism; renal excretion of metabolites accounts for <10% unchanged drug. Biliary/fecal elimination is minimal.
Renal excretion of lidocaine and prilocaine metabolites: lidocaine <10% unchanged, prilocaine negligible unchanged. Metabolites primarily renal.
Category C
Category C
Local Anesthetic
Local Anesthetic