Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W EPINEPHRINE versus VIVACAINE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W EPINEPHRINE versus VIVACAINE.
LIDOCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE W/ EPINEPHRINE vs VIVACAINE
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.
VIVACAINE is a local anesthetic that blocks the generation and conduction of nerve impulses by decreasing sodium ion permeability across the neuronal membrane.
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.
5-10 mL of 1% solution (50-100 mg) via submucosal infiltration or nerve block; maximum 500 mg per procedure.
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: 6–8 hours in healthy adults. In patients with hepatic impairment, half-life may be prolonged up to 12–15 hours; in severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min), half-life may extend to 10–12 hours.
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.
Renal excretion of unchanged drug and metabolites accounts for approximately 85–90% of elimination, with about 10–15% excreted in feces via biliary clearance. Less than 2% of the dose is recovered unchanged in urine; the remainder is as glucuronide conjugates and other metabolites.
Category A/B
Category C
Local Anesthetic / Antiarrhythmic (Class Ib)
Local Anesthetic