Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: SLO PHYLLIN versus TRUPHYLLINE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: SLO PHYLLIN versus TRUPHYLLINE.
SLO-PHYLLIN vs TRUPHYLLINE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
SLO-PHYLLIN (theophylline) is a xanthine bronchodilator that relaxes bronchial smooth muscle, likely by inhibiting phosphodiesterase, increasing intracellular cAMP, blocking adenosine receptors, and enhancing endogenous catecholamine release.
Truphylline is a xanthine derivative that inhibits phosphodiesterase (PDE) and blocks adenosine receptors, leading to bronchodilation, increased respiratory drive, and anti-inflammatory effects.
Theophylline (Slo-Phyllin) immediate-release: 100-200 mg orally every 6 hours; sustained-release: 200-400 mg orally every 12 hours. Dose titrated to serum theophylline concentration of 5-15 mcg/mL.
Aminophylline 5-6 mg/kg IV loading dose over 20-30 minutes, then 0.5-0.7 mg/kg/h continuous IV infusion; theophylline 300-600 mg PO daily divided q6-12h, titrated to serum theophylline level of 5-15 mcg/mL.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 3-8 hours in adults (non-smokers, healthy), 1-5 hours in smokers, and 20-30 hours in neonates. Clinical context: Half-life is prolonged in hepatic cirrhosis, heart failure, and with certain drug interactions (e.g., cimetidine, ciprofloxacin).
Terminal half-life: adults 6-8 hours, children 3-5 hours, neonates 24+ hours. Prolonged in hepatic or cardiac impairment.
Renal: ~10% unchanged; hepatic metabolism accounts for ~90% of elimination, with metabolites excreted in urine. Fecal: <5%.
Renal excretion of unchanged drug (80-90%) and metabolites; biliary/fecal elimination <10%.
Category C
Category C
Xanthine Bronchodilator
Xanthine Bronchodilator