Urecholine

Urecholine

Generic Name

Urecholine

Mechanism

  • Direct M3 receptor stimulation → ↑ intracellular Ca²⁺ → smooth‑muscle contraction
  • No significant nicotinic activity, minimizing neuromuscular side‑effects
  • Reversible agonism (receptor occupancy ≈ 30–50 %) allowing titration of effect
  • Rapid onset (≈15 min after oral dosing) and transient receptor desensitization mitigated by intermittent dosing

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterDetails
AbsorptionOral: 85 % bioavailability; peak plasma concentration Tₘₐₓ ≈ 0.5–1 h
DistributionVolume of distribution ≈ 0.6 L/kg; moderate protein binding (≈ 20 %)
MetabolismPhase II glucuronidation (UGT1A4) and minor oxidation (CYP3A4); minimal CYP450 involvement
EliminationRenal excretion: 75 % unchanged, 25 % as glucuronide; half‑life ≈ 4 h (shorter in advanced CKD)
Special PopulationsReduced clearance in CKD stage 3–5; dosage adjustment advised

Indications

  • Acute urinary retention (both male and female)
  • Detrusor under‑activity in post‑operative patients
  • Functional constipation refractory to laxatives (off‑label evidence)
  • Idiopathic lower urinary tract symptoms under specialist supervision

Contraindications

  • Contraindicated in patients with:
  • Severe uncontrolled asthma or COPD
  • Ocular myasthenia gravis
  • Severe gastric acid reflux unresponsive to anticholinergics
  • Warnings:
  • Possible cholinergic crisis with co‑administration of cholinesterase inhibitors or high‑dose neuraminidase inhibitors
  • May precipitate urinary incontinence or bladder overactivity in patients with neurogenic bladder
  • Precautions:
  • Use with caution in pregnancy (category C); lactation exposure minimal
  • Avoid in patients with renal impairment > Stage 3 without dose adjustment

Dosing

ConditionFirst DoseMaintenanceAdministration Notes
Acute urinary retention5 mg PO5 mg q6 h as neededInitiate after bladder scan confirms residual volume ≥ 300 mL
Detrusor under‑activity5 mg PO daily5–10 mg dailyTitrate by 5 mg increments every 3 days
Functional constipation5 mg PO twice daily5–10 mg BIDTake with food to reduce GI upset

Route: Oral tablets (5 mg), chewable formulation available for post‑operative patients
Formulation: 100 mg and 500 mg tablets for intravenous use (bolus 10 mg IV over 30 min for severe retention)

Adverse Effects

Common (≥ 5 %)
• Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps
• Diarrhea, increased stool frequency
• Excessive salivation, lacrimation
• Dizziness, blurred vision

Serious (≤ 1 %)
• Bradycardia or sinus arrest (especially in patients on β‑blockers)
• Severe hypotension from vasodilation
• Urinary retention paradox (bladder over‑activity)
• Anaphylactoid reaction (rash, angioedema)

Rare (≤ 0.1 %)
• Severe cholinergic crisis (yawning, hyperthermia, seizures)
• Acute interstitial nephritis

Monitoring

  • Baseline: Serum creatinine, electrolytes, ECG (HR, PR interval)
  • During therapy:
  • Urine output (≥ 300 mL/h post‑dose)
  • Bladder ultrasound to track residual volume
  • Serum BNP if heart failure co‑present
  • Lab monitoring: BUN/creatinine every 2 weeks first month, then quarterly in CKD patients
  • Adjuncts: Pulse oximetry if respiratory status is precarious

Clinical Pearls

  • “Urecholine on a Stop‑Watch”: Because the half‑life is short, patients report quicker symptom relief but may need more frequent dosing for lasting effect.
  • Tailored for CKD: Reduce dose by 50 % in patients with eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m²; consider a 2‑hour extended‑release formulation if renal clearance remains sub‑optimal.
  • Combination therapy: Pair with a short‑acting antimuscarinic (e.g., tolterodine) in cases of over‑activity to blunt unwanted detrusor contraction while retaining urinary retention benefits.
  • Patient education: Instruct on “safety‑first” signs: chest pain, faintness, or extreme sweating—promptly report these as possible cholinergic crisis.
  • Surgical setting: Administer pre‑operative dose 1–2 h before epidural or spinal anesthesia to pre‑empt postoperative urinary retention.

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• *For reference, see: “Textbook of Clinical Pharmacology, 7th ed.”, “Urologic Pharmacotherapy: Emerging Agents” (2023).*

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