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      Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of amlodipine.

      Radiology
      Amlodipine, Antihypertensive Agents, administration & dosage, pharmacokinetics, pharmacology, Calcium Channel Blockers, Half-Life, Humans, Hypertension, drug therapy, Nifedipine, analogs & derivatives

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          Abstract

          Amlodipine is a low-clearance, dihydropyridine calcium antagonist. The slow rate of elimination (elimination half-life of 40-60 h) confers several pharmacokinetic characteristics that are not seen with other calcium-antagonist drugs. It has high oral bioavailability (60-80%) and accumulates to a steady-state with once-daily administration over a period of 1-1 1/2 weeks. Fluctuation of plasma drug concentration between doses is between 20 and 25% when once-daily dosing is used. Onset of effect is gradual after oral administration which is due, in part, to an intermediate rate of drug absorption (peak plasma drug concentration occurs 6-8 h after dosing) and perhaps also to the physicochemical characteristics of the drug-cell membrane-receptor interaction. The pharmacodynamic profile of the drug in hypertensive patients is consistent with the disposition of the drug. After single doses, blood pressure decreases gradually over 4-8 h and may slowly return to baseline over 24-72 h. No change in heart rate is noted after the dose as the onset is gradual and physiological reflexes are not activated. During chronic, oral, once-daily dosing blood pressure is decreased from pretreatment baseline with little fluctuation over the 24-hour dose interval. Discontinuation of amlodipine treatment results in a slow return of blood pressure to baseline over 7-10 days, with no evidence of a 'rebound' effect. Amlodipine is a low-clearance, dihydropyridine calcium antagonist which is effective for the treatment of hypertension and angina pectoris with once-daily dosing.

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