Indication |
For the treatment of essential or renovascular hypertension
(usually administered with other drugs, particularly thiazide
diuretics). May be used to treat congestive heart failure in combination
with other drugs (e.g. cardiac glycosides, diuretics, β-adrenergic
blockers). May improve survival in patients with left ventricular
dysfunction following myocardial infarction. May be used to treat
nephropathy, including diabetic nephropathy. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Captopril, an ACE inhibitor, antagonizes the effect of the RAAS.
The RAAS is a homeostatic mechanism for regulating hemodynamics, water
and electrolyte balance. During sympathetic stimulation or when renal
blood pressure or blood flow is reduced, renin is released from the
granular cells of the juxtaglomerular apparatus in the kidneys. In the
blood stream, renin cleaves circulating angiotensinogen to ATI, which is
subsequently cleaved to ATII by ACE. ATII increases blood pressure
using a number of mechanisms. First, it stimulates the secretion of
aldosterone from the adrenal cortex. Aldosterone travels to the distal
convoluted tubule (DCT) and collecting tubule of nephrons where it
increases sodium and water reabsorption by increasing the number of
sodium channels and sodium-potassium ATPases on cell membranes. Second,
ATII stimulates the secretion of vasopressin (also known as antidiuretic
hormone or ADH) from the posterior pituitary gland. ADH stimulates
further water reabsorption from the kidneys via insertion of aquaporin-2
channels on the apical surface of cells of the DCT and collecting
tubules. Third, ATII increases blood pressure through direct arterial
vasoconstriction. Stimulation of the Type 1 ATII receptor on vascular
smooth muscle cells leads to a cascade of events resulting in myocyte
contraction and vasoconstriction. In addition to these major effects,
ATII induces the thirst response via stimulation of hypothalamic
neurons. ACE inhibitors inhibit the rapid conversion of ATI to ATII and
antagonize RAAS-induced increases in blood pressure. ACE (also known as
kininase II) is also involved in the enzymatic deactivation of
bradykinin, a vasodilator. Inhibiting the deactivation of bradykinin
increases bradykinin levels and may sustain its effects by causing
increased vasodilation and decreased blood pressure. |
Mechanism of action |
There are two isoforms of ACE: the somatic isoform, which exists
as a glycoprotein comprised of a single polypeptide chain of 1277; and
the testicular isoform, which has a lower molecular mass and is thought
to play a role in sperm maturation and binding of sperm to the oviduct
epithelium. Somatic ACE has two functionally active domains, N and C,
which arise from tandem gene duplication. Although the two domains have
high sequence similarity, they play distinct physiological roles. The
C-domain is predominantly involved in blood pressure regulation while
the N-domain plays a role in hematopoietic stem cell differentiation and
proliferation. ACE inhibitors bind to and inhibit the activity of both
domains, but have much greater affinity for and inhibitory activity
against the C-domain. Captopril, one of the few ACE inhibitors that is
not a prodrug, competes with ATI for binding to ACE and inhibits and
enzymatic proteolysis of ATI to ATII. Decreasing ATII levels in the body
decreases blood pressure by inhibiting the pressor effects of ATII as
described in the Pharmacology section above. Captopril also causes an
increase in plasma renin activity likely due to a loss of feedback
inhibition mediated by ATII on the release of renin and/or stimulation
of reflex mechanisms via baroreceptors. Captopril’s affinity for ACE is
approximately 30,000 times greater than that of ATI. |
Absorption |
60-75% in fasting individuals; food decreases absorption by 25-40%
(some evidence indicates that this is not clinically significant) |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
25-30% bound to plasma proteins, primarily albumin |
Metabolism |
Hepatic. Major metabolites are captopril-cysteine disulfide and
the disulfide dimer of captopril. Metabolites may undergo reversible
interconversion. |
Route of elimination |
Not Available |
Half life |
2 hours |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
Symptoms of overdose include emesis and decreased blood pressure.
Side effects include dose-dependent rash (usually maculopapular), taste
alterations, hypotension, gastric irritation, cough, and angioedema. |