Labetalol
Labetalol
Generic Name
Labetalol
Mechanism
- α₁‑Blockade
- Competitive inhibition of α₁‑adrenergic receptors → vasodilation, ↓ systemic vascular resistance, ↓ blood pressure.
- β₁‑ and β₂‑Blockade
- β₁ inhibition → ↓ heart rate, ↓ contractility, ↓ myocardial oxygen demand.
- β₂ inhibition reduces β₂‑mediated vasodilation in skeletal muscle but the net effect is still vasodilation because α₁‑blockade dominates.
- Net Effect
- Rapid, controlled fall in blood pressure with minimal reflex tachycardia due to balanced adrenergic blockade.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption
- Oral: > 70 % bioavailability; peak plasma 30–60 min.
- IV: 100 % bioavailability; onset within 2–5 min.
- Distribution
- Protein binding ~ 50 %; distribution half‑life 30 min.
- CNS penetration limited but significant for β₂ blockade in central sites.
- Metabolism
- Primarily hepatic via oxidative pathways (CYP1A2, CYP3A4).
– Minor renal excretion (≈ 15 % unchanged).
• Elimination
• Half‑life 4–9 h (oral); 3 h (IV).
• Clearable in patients with moderate hepatic impairment; dose adjustments advised.
• Drug Interactions
• CYP2D6 inhibitors ↑ plasma levels; CYP3A4 inhibitors ↑ exposure slightly.
• Concurrent diuretics → ↑ risk of isolated systolic hypertension.
Indications
- Acute management of severe hypertension, hypertensive emergencies, and pre‑operative control of blood pressure.
- Adjunctive therapy in acute type A aortic dissection.
- Pre‑operative blood pressure management in patients undergoing aortic arch surgery.
- First‑line agent for preeclampsia‑eclampsia when rapid BP reduction is essential.
Contraindications
- Absolute Contraindications
- Severe sinoatrial node dysfunction; symptomatic bradycardia; third‑degree AV block.
- Uncontrolled severe asthma or COPD (due to β₂ blockade).
- Relative Warnings
- New‑onset heart failure (β‑blockade may exacerbate).
- Hypotension, low cardiac output states; avoid rapid IV loading.
- Pregnancy: Category C; use only if benefits outweigh risks.
- Breastfeeding: excretion in milk; caution advised.
- Precautions
- Patients with liver dysfunction: monitor β‑blockade effects.
- Concurrent β‑blockers or antiarrhythmics: monitor HR, BP.
Dosing
| Age/Status | Route | Loading Dose | Maintenance |
| Adults | Oral | 200 mg PO BID (slow titration) | 100–200 mg PO BID, titrate to effect |
| Adults | IV | 10–20 mg IV over 2 min → total 30–40 mg | 5–20 mg/hr infusion; titrate every 3–5 min |
| Pediatrics | IV | 2 mg/kg over 2 min → up to 10 mg | 0.5–3 mg/kg/hr infusion |
• IV infusion: start at low rate; incrementally increase 3–5 min intervals, monitor BP.
• Oral: gradual dose escalation minimizes reflex tachycardia.
Adverse Effects
- Common:
- Reflex tachycardia (rare), dizziness, headache, fatigue, hypotension.
- Insomnia, nausea, vomiting.
- Serious:
- Severe hypotension, bradycardia, heart block.
- Pulmonary edema in susceptible patients.
- Angioedema (rare).
- Allergic reactions (rash, urticaria).
Monitoring
- Hemodynamic:
- BP and HR every 5–10 min during IV initiation; hourly thereafter.
- Laboratory:
- Electrolytes if on diuretics; renal function if renal impairment.
- Cardiac Monitoring:
- Continuous ECG during IV therapy; watch for arrhythmias.
- Clinical Signs:
- Signs of pulmonary edema (dyspnea, crackles).
Clinical Pearls
- α/β Balance – Labetalol’s unique dual action makes it ideal for patients where catecholamine surge is driven by both α and β pathways, such as hypertensive emergencies.
- Avoid Abrupt Withdrawal – A sudden stop during IV infusion can precipitate rebound hypertension; taper over 20–30 min if discontinued.
- Use in Pregnancy – Limited data; if used, prefer short courses; monitor maternal BP closely.
- Drug Interaction Check – Concomitant CYP3A4 inhibitors (e.g., ketoconazole) may raise plasma levels; consider dose reduction.
- Dosing Flexibility – The same drug can act as a rapid IV infusion or a titrated oral regimen, reducing the transition time between inpatient and outpatient care.
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• *Labetalol* provides a versatile, well‑characterized option for clinicians dealing with challenging, life‑threatening hypertensive states while maintaining a favorable safety profile when dosed appropriately.