Indication |
For the management of mild to severe hypertension. May be used to
reduce cardiovascular mortality following myocardial infarction in
hemodynamically stable individuals who develop clinical signs of
congestive heart failure within a few days following myocardial
infarction. To reduce the rate of death, myocardial infarction and
stroke in individuals at high risk of cardiovascular events. May be used
to slow the progression of renal disease in individuals with
hypertension, diabetes mellitus and microalubinuria or overt
nephropathy. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Ramipril is an ACE inhibitor similar to benazepril, fosinopril
and quinapril. It is an inactive prodrug that is converted to ramiprilat
in the liver, the main site of activation, and kidneys. Ramiprilat
confers blood pressure lowing effects by antagonizing 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 the effects of
ramiprilat 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. Ramiprilat, the principle active metabolite of
ramipril, 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. Ramipril 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. |
Absorption |
The extent of absorption is at least 50-60%. Food decreases the
rate of absorption from the GI tract without affecting the extent of
absorption. The absolute bioavailabilities of ramipril and ramiprilat
were 28% and 44%, respectively, when oral administration was compared to
intravenous administration. |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
Protein binding of ramipril is about 73% and that of ramiprilat about 56%. |
Metabolism |
Hepatic metabolism accounts for 75% of total ramipril
metabolism. 25% of hepatic metabolism produces the active metabolite
ramiprilat via liver esterase enzymes. 100% of renal metabolism converts
ramipril to ramiprilat. Other metabolites, diketopiperazine ester, the
diketopiperazine acid, and the glucuronides of ramipril and ramiprilat,
are inactive. |
Route of elimination |
Not Available |
Half life |
Plasma concentrations of ramiprilat decline in a triphasic manner.
Initial rapid decline represents distribution into tissues and has a
half life of 2-4 hours. The half life of the apparent elimination phase
is 9-18 hours and that of the terminal elimination phase is > 50
hours. Two elimination phases occur as a result of ramiprilat's potent
binding to ACE and slow dissociation from the enzyme. The half life of
ramiprilat after multiple daily doses (MDDs) is dose-dependent, ranging
from 13-17 hours with 5-10 mg MDDs to 27-36 hours for 2.5 mg MDDs. |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
Symptoms of overdose may include excessive peripheral vasodilation
(with marked hypotension and shock), bradycardia, electrolyte
disturbances, and renal failure. The most likely adverse reactions are
symptoms attributable to its blood-pressure lowing effect. May cause
headache, dizziness, asthenia, chest pain, nausea, peripheral edema,
somnolence, impotence, rash, arthritis, and dyspnea.
LD50 = 10933 mg/kg (orally in mice).
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