Pharm
Guanethidine
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Guanethidine
, Ismelin
See Also
Peripheral Presynaptic Alpha Adrenergic Antagonist
Sympathetic Nervous System
Alpha Adrenergic Receptor
Postsynaptic Alpha Adrenergic Antagonist
(e.g.
Prazosin
)
Reserpine
(
Serpasil
)
Guanadrel
(
Hylorel
)
Mechanism
Transiently increases
Norepinephrine
release from nerve terminals (with transient
Hypertension
and
Tachycardia
)
Subsequent decreased
Norepinephrine
release via depletion of
Norepinephrine
from nerve stores
Prevents
Norepinephrine
release at nerve endings
Chronic sensitization of nerves to
Sympathomimetic
s
Poorly crosses blood brain barrier
No sedation (contrast with
Reserpine
)
Pharmacokinetics
Bioavailability
30% after oral dose
Half is Metabolized
Half-Life
: 5 days (very long)
Adverse effects persists for weeks after stopping agent
Indications
Rarely used in United States
May have a place in
Severe Hypertension
, but has been replaced by newer agents with fewer adverse effects
Contraindications
Pheochromocytoma
Severe Hypertension
Dosing
Adults
Start: 10 mg orally daily
Titrate to 25 to 50 mg orally daily
Adverse Effects
Transient
Hypertension
and
Tachycardia
(see mechanism above)
Orthostatic Hypotension
Reflex
Tachycardia
mechanism blocked by loss of
Norepinephrine
release
Decreased
Cardiac Output
Bradycardia
Diarrhea
COPD
Exacerbation
Nasal congestion (significantly increased)
Drug Interactions
Tricyclic Antidepressant
s (TCA)
TCAs block Guanethidine entry into cells
References
Olson (2020) Clinical
Pharmacology
, MedMaster, Miami, p. 64-5
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