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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:

Calcium Channel Blockers


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:


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:


Adverse Effects

Common:

  • Headache
  • Flushing
  • Peripheral edema
  • Reflex tachycardia

Caution in:

  • Severe hypotension
  • Advanced aortic stenosis

Nicardipine vs Other DHPs

Amlodipine:

  • Long-acting oral agent
  • Slow onset

Nifedipine:

  • 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

cardio/ccb/nicardipine.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns