
Lidocaine Injection
| Product/Composition | Lidocaine Injection |
|---|---|
| Strength | 2% |
| Form | Injection |
| Production Capacity | 1 Million Injection/Month |
| Packaging | 30ml |
| Therapeutic use | Analgesic |
| Package Insert/Leaflet | Available upon request |
Lidocaine Injection
Lidocaine injection is a widely used local anesthetic and antiarrhythmic agent. It’s available as preservative-free or with epinephrine in various concentrations and is given by multiple parenteral routes depending on the clinical purpose.
Forms & concentrations
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Solutions for injection (common concentrations): 0.5%, 1%, 2% (w/v).
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May be supplied with epinephrine (e.g., 1:100,000) to prolong effect and reduce systemic absorption.
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Sterile ampoules or vials for subcutaneous (SC), intradermal, infiltration, nerve block, epidural, or intravenous use.
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IV formulations (for antiarrhythmic use) are preservative-free and intended for bolus/infusion.
Mechanism of action
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Blocks voltage-gated sodium channels in neuronal and cardiac cell membranes.
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In peripheral nerves → prevents initiation/propagation of nerve impulses → local anesthesia.
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In myocardium → reduces automaticity and conduction velocity, suppressing ventricular arrhythmias (when given IV).
Common indications
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Local/regional anesthesia: infiltration, peripheral nerve blocks, digital blocks, dental procedures, minor surgical procedures.
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Epidural or spinal (when formulated appropriately) in some settings.
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Antiarrhythmic (IV): acute treatment of ventricular tachycardia, ventricular ectopy, and in cardiac resuscitation in select protocols.
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Topical mucosal anesthesia (when formulated for that use).
Typical dosing (general ranges — always follow local protocol)
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Local infiltration: depends on site and concentration; total dose usually limited by weight-based max.
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Peripheral nerve block: volumes and concentrations vary by block type and provider preference.
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With epinephrine permits larger total dose due to decreased systemic absorption.
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IV antiarrhythmic (adult): a typical bolus ~1–1.5 mg/kg IV over 2–3 minutes, followed (if needed) by infusion (e.g., 1–4 mg/min) — use institution protocols.
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Maximum total dose (approximate): without epinephrine often quoted ~3–5 mg/kg (lean body weight) and with epinephrine up to ~7 mg/kg — exact limits depend on formulation, route, and patient factors.
Important: dosing must be individualized (age, weight, comorbidities, concurrent drugs). Use institutional guidelines or product labeling.
Onset and duration
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Onset: rapid — minutes (depends on route and concentration).
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Duration: short to intermediate; adding epinephrine prolongs effect (can double/triple duration depending on site).
Adverse effects
Local/systemic toxicity (if absorbed systemically or overdose):
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Early CNS signs: circumoral numbness, metallic taste, tinnitus, visual disturbances, lightheadedness, agitation.
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Progressive CNS toxicity: tremor, seizures, respiratory depression, coma.
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Cardiovascular: hypotension, bradycardia, conduction block, arrhythmias, cardiovascular collapse (severe overdose).
Local reactions:
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Pain or irritation at injection site, hematoma, infection (rare).
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Transient nerve injury or prolonged numbness (rare).
Allergic reactions:
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True IgE-mediated allergy to amide local anesthetics (lidocaine) is rare; more commonly related to preservatives or metabolite sensitivity.
Contraindications & cautions
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Known hypersensitivity to lidocaine or other amide-type local anesthetics.
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Use caution (or avoid large doses) in severe hepatic impairment (metabolism reduced), severe cardiac conduction abnormalities (unless used/monitored for antiarrhythmic purpose), and in patients on certain antiarrhythmics or drugs that alter lidocaine clearance.
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Avoid high-volume blocks in end-artery areas (digital blocks with epinephrine are generally avoided in some practices).
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Pregnancy/lactation: use only if clearly needed and benefits outweigh risks — obstetric use requires careful consideration.
Drug interactions
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Drugs that inhibit hepatic metabolism (e.g., certain CYP inhibitors) can raise lidocaine levels.
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Concomitant antiarrhythmics or other local anesthetics can have additive cardiac/CNS toxicity.
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Beta-blockers, cimetidine, and others may reduce clearance — monitor dose.
Monitoring & management of toxicity
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Monitor for early CNS symptoms after large or vascular injections.
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For suspected systemic local anesthetic toxicity: stop dosing, support airway/ventilation, treat seizures (benzodiazepines preferred), provide circulatory support (fluids/vasopressors) and follow ACLS as needed.
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Lipid emulsion therapy (20% intralipid) is an established treatment for severe local anesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST) — give early in cardiovascular collapse per guidelines/protocols.
Special populations
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Elderly and hepatic impairment: reduce dose and monitor closely.
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Pediatrics: weight-based dosing essential; younger children have different pharmacokinetics.
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Pregnancy: increased cardiac output and altered protein binding may affect plasma levels.
Storage & handling
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Store according to product labeling (generally at controlled room temperature and protected from light).
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Use aseptic technique; discard single-use ampoules after use.
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Check concentration and presence/absence of epinephrine before administration.