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Propranolol

From Pharmacopedia
Revision as of 07:15, 15 May 2026 by MDElliottMD (talk | contribs) (Create Propranolol scaffold)
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Beta Blocker, Non-selective
Propranolol
Inderal
Propranolol was the first clinically successful beta blocker, introduced in 1964 by James Black. It is non-selective and lipophilic — it crosses the blood–brain barrier readily, which makes it uniquely useful for conditions with a CNS component (performance anxiety, akathisia, essential tremor, migraine prophylaxis) but also accounts for CNS side effects (vivid dreams, fatigue, depression).

Experience

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Problems

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Titration strategies

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Effects

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Pharmacokinetics

Absorption

~25% oral bioavailability due to high hepatic first-pass extraction.

Distribution

Highly lipophilic; ~90% plasma protein binding; readily crosses the BBB.

Metabolism

Hepatic via CYP2D6, CYP1A2, CYP2C19. Active metabolite: 4-hydroxypropranolol.

Elimination

Renal excretion of metabolites; <1% unchanged in urine.

Interactions

No interactions reported yet.

Monitoring

Heart rate, blood pressure

Patient counseling

Do not stop abruptly — taper to avoid rebound tachycardia, hypertension, or angina. Use with caution in asthma/COPD. May mask hypoglycemia symptoms in diabetics.

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Relevant Literature

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See also

Metoprolol, Bisoprolol, Nebivolol

References

Summary
Classes
Beta Blocker, Non-selective
Pharmacy
Starting dose
10–40 mg (situational anxiety); 40 mg BID (HTN)
Preparations
10, 20, 40, 60, 80 mg tabs; 60/80/120/160 mg ER caps; 1 mg/mL IV
US FDA Max
640 mg/d (HTN); 240 mg/d (migraine)
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral, IV
Onset
1–2 h (PO), immediate (IV)
Duration
6–12 h (IR); 24 h (ER)
Half-life
3–6 h
Bioavailability
~25% (extensive hepatic first-pass)
Pregnancy
Category C
Legal status
Rx-only in US
Purported mechanism
Non-selective competitive antagonist at β1 and β2 adrenergic receptors. Lipophilic; significant blood–brain barrier penetration, accounting for its CNS effects.