Indication |
For production of local or regional analgesia and anesthesia by
local infiltration, peripheral nerve block techniques, and central
neural techniques including epidural and caudal blocks. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Mepivicaine is a local anesthetic of the amide type. Mepivicaine
as a reasonably rapid onset and medium duration and is known by the
proprietary names as Carbocaine and Polocaine. Mepivicaine is used in
local infiltration and regional anesthesia. Systemic absorption of local
anesthetics produces effects on the cardiovascular and central nervous
systems. At blood concentrations achieved with normal therapeutic doses,
changes in cardiac conduction, excitability, refractoriness,
contractility, and peripheral vascular resistance are minimal. |
Mechanism of action |
Local anesthetics block the generation and the conduction of nerve
impulses, presumably by increasing the threshold for electrical
excitation in the nerve, by slowing the propagation of the nerve
impulse, and by reducing the rate of rise of the action potential. In
general, the progression of anesthesia is related to the diameter,
myelination, and conduction velocity of affected nerve fibers.
Clinically, the order of loss of nerve function is as follows: pain,
temperature, touch, proprioception, and skeletal muscle tone. |
Absorption |
Absorbed locally. The rate of systemic absorption of local
anesthetics is dependent upon the total dose and concentration of drug
administered, the route of administration, the vascularity of the
administration site, and the presence or absence of epinephrine in the
anesthetic solution. |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
Mepivacaine is approximately 75% bound to plasma proteins.
Generally, the lower the plasma concentration of drug, the higher the
percentage of drug bound to plasma. |
Metabolism |
Rapidly metabolized, with only a small percentage of the
anesthetic (5 percent to 10 percent) being excreted unchanged in the
urine. The liver is the principal site of metabolism, with over 50% of
the administered dose being excreted into the bile as metabolites. |
Route of elimination |
It is rapidly metabolized, with only a small percentage of the
anesthetic (5 percent to 10 percent) being excreted unchanged in the
urine.The liver is the principal site of metabolism, with over 50% of
the administered dose being excreted into the bile as metabolites. |
Half life |
The half-life of mepivacaine in adults is 1.9 to 3.2 hours and in neonates 8.7 to 9 hours. |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
The mean seizure dosage of mepivacaine in rhesus monkeys was found
to be 18.8 mg/kg with mean arterial plasma concentration of 24.4 µg/mL.
The intravenous and subcutaneous LD 50 in mice is 23 mg/kg to 35 mg/kg
and 280 mg/kg respectively. |