Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: METOPROLOL versus TRASICOR.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: METOPROLOL versus TRASICOR.
Metoprolol vs TRASICOR
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Selective beta-1 adrenergic receptor antagonist; competitively blocks beta-1 receptors in the heart, decreasing heart rate, contractility, and cardiac output; reduces renin release from kidneys.
Non-selective beta-adrenergic antagonist with intrinsic sympathomimetic activity (partial agonist) at beta-1 and beta-2 receptors, reducing heart rate, myocardial contractility, and blood pressure.
Metoprolol tartrate: Initial 50 mg PO BID or 100 mg PO daily; maintenance 100-450 mg/day in divided doses. Metoprolol succinate (extended-release): Initial 25-100 mg PO once daily; maintenance 100-400 mg once daily.
20-40 mg orally three times daily, increased to 80-160 mg daily if needed; maximum 320 mg/day.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateMetoprolol + Digoxin
"Metoprolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Digoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateMetoprolol + Digitoxin
"Metoprolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Digitoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateMetoprolol + Deslanoside
"Metoprolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Deslanoside."
Clinical Note
moderateMetoprolol + Acetyldigitoxin
"Metoprolol may increase the bradycardic activities of Acetyldigitoxin."
3–7 hours for metoprolol; prolonged in poor CYP2D6 metabolizers (up to 8–16 hours). Clinical context: dosing interval typically twice daily (immediate-release) or once daily (extended-release).
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 8-12 hours in patients with normal renal function; may be prolonged in renal impairment, requiring dose adjustment.
Primarily hepatic metabolism (CYP2D6) producing inactive metabolites; renal excretion accounts for <5% unchanged. Fecal elimination minimal.
Renal excretion of unchanged drug and metabolites accounts for approximately 80% of elimination, with about 20% appearing as unchanged drug; biliary/fecal excretion accounts for the remaining 20%.
Category C
Category C
Beta-Blocker
Beta-Blocker