Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W EPINEPHRINE versus TETRACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W EPINEPHRINE versus TETRACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE.
LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W/ EPINEPHRINE vs TETRACAINE HYDROCHLORIDE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Lidocaine is a sodium channel blocker that inhibits voltage-gated sodium channels, preventing depolarization and conduction of nerve impulses. Epinephrine is an alpha- and beta-adrenergic agonist that causes vasoconstriction, reducing systemic absorption of lidocaine and prolonging local anesthetic effect.
Tetracaine hydrochloride is a local anesthetic of the ester type that reversibly blocks nerve conduction by decreasing sodium ion permeability across the neuronal membrane, thereby stabilizing the membrane and preventing the initiation and transmission of nerve impulses.
Local anesthesia: 1-5 mL of 1% or 2% solution with epinephrine 1:100,000 or 1:200,000; maximum dose 7 mg/kg lidocaine (500 mg without epinephrine, 7 mg/kg with epinephrine) per procedure. Intravenous: 1-1.5 mg/kg bolus for ventricular arrhythmias, followed by continuous infusion 1-4 mg/min.
Topical: 0.5-2% solution or ointment applied to affected area up to 4 times daily as needed. Maximum single dose: 20 mL of 2% solution (400 mg). Spinal anesthesia: 0.5% solution, 2-3 mL (10-15 mg) injected intrathecally.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal half-life 1.5-2 hours (single dose), prolonged to 2-3 hours with continuous infusion; in heart failure or hepatic cirrhosis, half-life may exceed 5 hours.
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 1.5–3 minutes in plasma due to rapid hydrolysis; clinical effect duration is dose-dependent (15–30 minutes for topical anesthesia).
Renal: unchanged drug <10%, major metabolites (MEGX and GX) ~70% renal; biliary: <10% fecal; total clearance ~10-20 mL/min/kg. Renal impairment prolongs elimination of metabolites.
Primarily metabolized by plasma pseudocholinesterase; renal excretion of metabolites accounts for >95% of elimination, with <2% excreted unchanged in urine. Biliary/fecal elimination is negligible.
Category A/B
Category C
Local Anesthetic / Antiarrhythmic (Class Ib)
Local Anesthetic