Indication |
For the management of hypertension. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Betaxolol is a competitive, beta(1)-selective (cardioselective)
adrenergic antagonist. Betaxolol is used to treat hypertension,
arrhythmias, coronary heart disease, glaucoma, and is also used to
reduce non-fatal cardiac events in patients with heart failure.
Activation of beta(1)-receptors (located mainly in the heart) by
epinephrine increases the heart rate and the blood pressure, and the
heart consumes more oxygen. Drugs such as betaxolol that block these
receptors therefore have the reverse effect: they lower the heart rate
and blood pressure and hence are used in conditions when the heart
itself is deprived of oxygen. They are routinely prescribed in patients
with ischemic heart disease. In addition, beta(1)-selective blockers
prevent the release of renin, which is a hormone produced by the kidneys
which leads to constriction of blood vessels. Betaxolol is lipophilic
and exhibits no intrinsic sympathomimetic activity (ISA) or membrane
stabilizing activity. |
Mechanism of action |
Betaxolol selectively blocks catecholamine stimulation of
beta(1)-adrenergic receptors in the heart and vascular smooth muscle.
This results in a reduction of heart rate, cardiac output, systolic and
diastolic blood pressure, and possibly reflex orthostatic hypotension.
Betaxolol can also competitively block beta(2)-adrenergic responses in
the bronchial and vascular smooth muscles, causing bronchospasm. |
Absorption |
Absorption of an oral dose is complete. There is a small and
consistent first-pass effect resulting in an absolute bioavailability of
89% ± 5% that is unaffected by the concomitant ingestion of food or
alcohol. |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
50% |
Metabolism |
Primarily hepatic. Approximately 15% of the dose administered is
excreted as unchanged drug, the remainder being metabolites whose
contribution to the clinical effect is negligible. |
Route of elimination |
Not Available |
Half life |
14-22 hours |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
Oral LD50s are 350 to 400 mg betaxolol/kg in mice and
860 to 980 mg/kg in rats. Predicted symptoms of overdose include
bradycardia, congestive heart failure, hypotension, bronchospasm, and
hypoglycemia. |