Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: HEPARIN SODIUM 12 500 UNITS IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PANWARFIN.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: HEPARIN SODIUM 12 500 UNITS IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PANWARFIN.
HEPARIN SODIUM 12,500 UNITS IN DEXTROSE 5% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs PANWARFIN
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Heparin binds to antithrombin III (ATIII) and accelerates its inhibition of thrombin (factor IIa) and other serine proteases (factors Xa, IXa, XIa, XIIa) in the coagulation cascade, thereby preventing fibrin clot formation.
Anticoagulant that inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase, thereby decreasing hepatic synthesis of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X.
Continuous IV infusion: Initial bolus 80 units/kg, then 18 units/kg/hour; subsequent dose adjusted based on aPTT. Typical infusion rate: 20,000–40,000 units/24 hours.
5 mg orally once daily, adjusted to maintain INR 2-3.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is 1-2 hours at therapeutic doses, dose-dependent: 30-60 min after IV bolus of 25 U/kg, increasing to 1.5-2.5 hours after 400 U/kg. Prolonged in hepatic/renal impairment and pulmonary embolism. Clinical context: continuous infusion achieves steady-state after ~4-6 hours.
Terminal elimination half-life is 20-60 hours (mean ~40 hours). Clinically, the longer half-life allows for once-daily dosing and steady-state is achieved in 5-7 days; anticoagulant effect may persist for 2-5 days after discontinuation due to depletion of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors.
Heparin is eliminated primarily via hepatic metabolism and renal excretion. Approximately 50% of a dose undergoes hepatic desulfation and depolymerization to form uroheparin, which is excreted in urine. Unchanged heparin is cleared renally via saturable, dose-dependent mechanisms. Biliary/fecal elimination is negligible (<5%).
Primarily renal as inactive metabolites; 60-92% of a dose is excreted in urine, with about 50% as the 7-hydroxywarfarin metabolite and the remainder as other metabolites. Biliary/fecal elimination accounts for approximately 10-20%.
Category A/B
Category C
Anticoagulant
Anticoagulant