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dicyclomine (Bentyl)

Tradename: Bentyl. Indication: irritable bowel syndrome Dosage: 1) adults: 10-40 mg PO/IM QID 2) children: 10 mg PO TID-QID Tabs: 10 & 20 mg. Syrup: 10 mg/5 mL, 10 mg/mL [3] Pharmacokinetics: 1) rapidly absorbed from GI tract 2) peak levels in 1-1.5 hours after oral administration 3) absorbed slightly faster after IM administration 4) elimination a) 1/2life is 9-10 hours b) 80% of drug eliminated in the urine c) 20% of drug eliminated in the feces Adverse effects: 1) common (> 10%) 1) constipation 2) decreased sweating 3) dry mouth, nose, throat or skin 4) reactions at injection site 2) less common (1-10%) - diminished flow of breast milk, difficulty swallowing, blurred vision, photosensitivity 3) uncommon (< 1%) - skin rash, confusion, increased intraocular pain, orthostatic hypotension, bloating, difficulty urinating, drowsiness, headache, lightheadedness, loss of memory, nausea/vomiting, weakness, tiredness, tachycardia, palpitations, seizures, asphyxia, coma, nervousness, excitement, confusion, insomnia, muscular hypotonia, urinary retention, respiratory distress 4) other: - sedation Mechanism of action: 1) antispasmodic tertiary amine 2) may act act non-selective smooth muscle relaxant 3) little to no anti-muscarinic activity 4) decreases abdominal pain by decreasing intestinal contractions

Interactions

drug interactions drug adverse effects of parasympatholytics

General

antiulcer agent parasympatholytic (anticholinergic, antimuscarinic agent) smooth muscle relaxant

Properties

MISC-INFO: elimination route LIVER KIDNEY pregnancy-category C safety in lactation -

Database Correlations

PUBCHEM correlations

References

  1. The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 9th ed. Gilman et al, eds. Permagon Press/McGraw Hill, 1996
  2. Drug Information & Medication Formulary, Veterans Affairs, Central California Health Care System, 1st ed., Ravnan et al eds, 1998
  3. Kaiser Permanente Northern California Regional Drug Formulary, 1998