Nicardipine
Nicardipine
Generic Name
Nicardipine
Mechanism
- Selective calcium‑channel blockade: Inhibits L‑type voltage‑gated Ca²⁺ channels in vascular smooth muscle, preventing Ca²⁺ influx.
- Resulting vasodilation: Decreases systemic vascular resistance, lowering arterial blood pressure.
- Reduced myocardial oxygen demand: By lowering afterload, it modestly decreases cardiac workload.
- Preservation of coronary perfusion: Less myocardial depressant effect than non‑dihydropyridine CCBs (e.g., verapamil).
Pharmacokinetics
- Dose form: IV infusion (1 mg/mL in 0.9% saline).
- Absorption: Not applicable (IV).
- Distribution: Wide, high protein binding (~95 % to albumin).
- Metabolism: Hepatic (CYP3A4‑mediated).
- Elimination: Renal (approx. 28 % unchanged), hepatic (72 %).
- Half‑life: ~2 – 4 h (steady‑state 1 – 2 h).
- Brain penetration: Moderate, enabling central vasodilatory actions.
Indications
- Hypertensive emergencies (e.g., uncontrolled BP > 180/110 mm Hg).
- Acute ischemic stroke: Continuous infusion to maintain systolic BP < 140 mm Hg.
- Intra‑operative BP management: In cardiac or neurosurgical procedures.
- Hypertensive encephalopathy: Over‑reliance on its cerebral vasodilatory effect.
Contraindications
- Contraindicated in patients with severe aortic stenosis or advanced heart failure where myocardial calcium influx is required.
- Known hypersensitivity to any CCB or DHP.
- Use with caution in:
- Severe hepatic impairment (metabolism reduction).
- Concomitant use of potent CYP3A4 inhibitors (increased toxicity).
- Patients on potent nitrates (enhanced hypotension).
- Pregnancy: Category C; avoid in first trimester if possible.
Dosing
- Initial rate: 0.3 µg/kg/min IV infusion.
- Titration: Increase by 0.2 µg/kg/min every 15–30 min to achieve target BP.
- Maximum rate: 2.0 µg/kg/min.
- Duration: Typically 6–48 h; may be extended based on clinical response.
- Restarting infusion: If BP rebounds, restart at 0.3 µg/kg/min.
Adverse Effects
- Common
- Reflex tachycardia
- Headache, dizziness
- Peripheral edema
- Facial flushing
- Serious
- Severe hypotension (especially when combined with other antihypertensives)
- Tachyarrhythmias (rare)
- Ocular effects (sudden visual disturbances, angle‑closure glaucoma).
- Drug interactions:
- CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, clarithromycin) → increase serum levels.
- CYP3A4 inducers (rifampin, carbamazepine) → decrease efficacy.
Monitoring
- Blood pressure: Every 5–15 min during titration, then hourly.
- Heart rate: Monitor for reflex tachycardia.
- Serum electrolytes: Daily, particularly potassium.
- Liver function: Baseline and repeat as clinically indicated.
- Renal function: Baseline serum creatinine, then twice weekly.
- Neurological status (in stroke): NIH Stroke Scale assessments.
Clinical Pearls
- "Ramp‑up and titrate" rule: Start low to avoid abrupt systemic vasodilation; titrate only after confirming target BP.
- CYP3A4 checks: Prior to infusion, review concurrent meds that may alter nicardipine metabolism; consider dose adjustment if on strong inhibitors.
- Stroke guidelines alignment: Maintain systolic BP 60 bpm.
> *Nicardipine offers a reliable, titratable IV option for managing hypertensive crises with minimal myocardial depressant activity, making it a first‑line choice in stroke care and invasive procedures.*