Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Chlorhexidine

Unchecked
From Pharmacopedia
Chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG)
Hibiclens, Hibistat, Peridex (dental rinse), ChloraPrep

Experience

👥 No personal reports yet
No clinical reports yet

Log in to add your own experience.

Problems

No problems yet. Be the first to suggest one.

+ Add a problem

Titration strategies

No titration strategies yet. Be the first to suggest one.

+ Add a titration strategy

Effects

No effects listed yet. Be the first to suggest one.

+ Add an effect

Relevant anecdote

No anecdotes yet. Share a relevant one.

+ Add an anecdote

Relevant Literature

No literature entries yet.

Log in to submit relevant literature.

Pharmacy
Starting dose
Surgical scrub 4% CHG; preop skin prep 2% CHG/70% isopropyl alcohol (ChloraPrep); ICU bathing 2% CHG daily; oral rinse 0.12% 15 mL twice daily for 30 seconds
Preparations
2%, 4% wash; 2% CHG/70% IPA applicators (ChloraPrep); 0.12%, 0.2% oral rinse; impregnated catheter dressings
US FDA Max
Per formulation
Common uses
Classification(s)
Pharmacology
Routes
Topical, oral rinse (do not swallow)
Onset
Minutes
Duration
Persistent activity 6+ hours (residual binding to skin and oral surfaces)
Half-life
Not meaningfully described (negligible systemic absorption from intact skin or oral mucosa)[1]
Bioavailability
Topical/oral local action with minimal systemic absorption[1]
Pregnancy
Generally considered safe (minimal systemic absorption).[citation needed]
Legal status
OTC (lower-concentration washes) and Rx-only (Peridex oral rinse, ChloraPrep) in US
Purported mechanism
Chlorhexidine is a cationic bisbiguanide that binds negatively charged bacterial cell walls, disrupting membrane integrity and producing rapid bactericidal action; the residual binding to skin and oral surfaces sustains antimicrobial effect for hours after application, the basis of its dominance in surgical antisepsis.0 Hypersensitivity (including anaphylaxis) is a rising concern (FDA 2017 advisory on CHG-related anaphylaxis); also produces extrinsic dental staining and altered taste with prolonged oral rinse use. Active against most gram-positives and gram-negatives; some resistance in long-term hospital use[1].
Pharmacopedia is intended for reference. Nothing here is advice. In an emergency call 911; US Poison Control 1-800-222-1222. See the full disclaimer.

References

edit
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 FDA OTC monograph for chlorhexidine gluconate, current revision.