cardio:ccb:nicardipine
Nicardipine
Nicardipine is a Dihydropyridine Calcium Channel Blocker (DHP CCB).
It is a potent arterial vasodilator available in both oral and intravenous formulations.
Used in:
- Hypertensive emergency (IV)
Mechanism of Action
Nicardipine blocks L-type calcium channels in vascular smooth muscle.
This results in:
- ↓ Intracellular calcium
- Potent arterial vasodilation
- ↓ Systemic Vascular Resistance
- ↓ Afterload
Minimal direct AV nodal suppression.
Primary action = vascular.
Hemodynamic Effects
- ↓ Blood pressure
- ↓ Afterload
- Possible reflex tachycardia
- Preserves cardiac output
Compared to:
- Amlodipine → more rapid onset
- Nifedipine → smoother IV titration
Clinical Use
Hypertensive Emergency (IV):
- Common first-line IV antihypertensive
- Easily titratable
- Smooth BP reduction
Often used in:
- Stroke
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Aortic syndromes (with beta-blocker)
Chronic Hypertension (oral form):
- Less commonly used than amlodipine
Angina:
- Reduces afterload
- Improves oxygen supply-demand balance
Advantages in Hypertensive Emergency
- Predictable titration
- Does not significantly reduce cerebral blood flow
- Rapid onset
- Short half-life (IV)
Compared to:
- Nitroprusside → less risk of cyanide toxicity
- Labetalol → pure vasodilator (no beta blockade)
Adverse Effects
Common:
- Headache
- Flushing
- Peripheral edema
- Reflex tachycardia
Caution in:
- Severe hypotension
- Advanced aortic stenosis
Nicardipine vs Other DHPs
- Long-acting oral agent
- Slow onset
- Oral only
- Short-acting form discouraged
Nicardipine:
- Potent
- IV formulation available
- Ideal for hypertensive emergency
Clinical Pearls
- DHP CCB
- Strong arterial vasodilator
- Preferred IV agent for hypertensive emergency
- Reflex tachycardia possible
- Does not slow AV node
- Easy titration
Related
cardio/ccb/nicardipine.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns
