PROCAINE
(Novocain)
What
is Procaine?
It
is the first injectable local anesthetic to be synthesized, commonly known
as Novocain.The German Chemist,
Alfred Einhorn, developed it in 1904.
What
company originally developed Procaine?
In
1911, Dr. Mendal Nevin founded Novocol Chemical Manufacturing Company,
Inc. The Company imported Procaine into the United States from Germany.The
U.S. Government granted the first license to synthesize and manufacture
Procaine when the United States entered World War I.With
license in hand, Dr. Nevin set his private
dental practice aside and devoted his full time to manufacturing Procaine
in the United States.Novocol is
currently owned by Deproco Incorporated.
How
does Procaine work?
Procaine
temporarily prevents the sense organs from initiating afferent impulses
and provides regional analgesia.
It
works by producing a trigeminal nerve conduction block, in the mandibular
(3rd) branch, decreasing the permeability of the axon cell membrane to
(Na+) sodium ions.This mechanism
prevents the entry of Na+ ions into the axon to propagate an action potential
in both slow and fast pain fibers.Unmyelinated
axons are the first to be affected.Myelinated
motor nerves are only affected at the
nodes of Ranvier.Procaine works
to anesthetize a patient for about 15 minutes.To
prolong anesthesia epinephrine is added as a vasoconstrictor.
What
plant was procaine derived from?
The
coca plant.It is a member of the
order Geraniales and the family Erythroxylaceae.Bolivian
coca grows in the moist tropical forests of the eastern Andes of Peru and
Bolivia. This variety is one of four found growing in the wild. Bolivian
coca is the major source of commercially produced coca leaves and cocaine.Procaine
is the precursor to cocaine.
Novocaine
means “new cocaine.”
Cocaine
versus Procaine...
Cocaine
blocks Na+ passage through the axon cell membrane and inhibits the reuptake
of Dopamine and Serotonin resulting in psycho-stimulation.Procaine
blocks nerve conductance via inhibiting Na+ at the membrane, thus no psycho-stimulation.Both
reactions are brief.
Side
effects?
Despite
the past widespread use of procaine, reports of side effects have been
rare, and are usually associated with excessive dosage, rapid absorption
or inadvertent intravascular injection. Lightheadedness, irregular heart
beats and allergic reactions have rarely been reported for oral procaine.Very
rarely an allergic reaction may cause seizure.
There
are two types of local anesthetic drugs: ester and amide.Procaine
is an ester-type.Allergic reactions
that occur are usually not in response to Procaine, but rather to para-aminobenzoic
acid (PABA) which is a major metabolic product of all ester-type local
anesthetics.Procaine is metabolized
in the plasma by the enzyme pseudocholinesterase, an enzyme involved in
the breakdown of acetylcholine, it is similar to acetylcholinesterase.However
acetylcholinesterase is found in the nerve tissue and pseudocholinesterase
is found primarily in the liver.Procaine
undergoes hydrolysis (the splitting of a compound into fragments by the
addition of water, the hydroxyl group being incorporated in one fragment
and the hydrogen atom in the other) and breaks into para-aminobenzoic acid
(PABA), which is excreted unchanged in the urine, and diethylamino alcohol,
which undergoes further transformation prior to excretion.The
structure of PABA is common to many other antigenic compounds and is thought
to account for allergic reactions.
Approximately
1 in 3000 persons has an atypical form of pseudocholin-esterase, resulting
in the inability to hydrolyze procaine and other ester-type local anesthetics.
This in turn causes a prolongation of high blood levels of the procaine
and increased toxicity.
Who
should not take this medication?
People
who have experienced allergy to the drug should not take it.Fortunately,
true allergic reaction to procaine is rare. However, adverse reactions
(anesthetic overdose, fainting) appear to be common.Differentiating
between allergic reactions and resistance to the drug is often difficult
because of the similarity of the symptoms.Thus,
many physicians are conservative and label patients as "allergic" to all
"caine" drugs even when the signs and symptoms are consistent with an adverse
reaction.Unfortunately, this conservative
decision often results in the patient being denied the comfort of a local
anesthetic when desirable.
Drug
Interactions?
Procaine
is thought to reduce the effects of sulfonamide antibiotics.
How
is this medication administered?
Oral
injection.
Cost?
Procaine
is very cost effective for short term local anesthesia.The
patient only pays for regional anesthesia opposed to full-body anesthesia.It
is $77 per 100 grams and only 40mg is necessaryfor
the minimum dosage.However, procaine
is used infrequently.It’s brief
affects are no competition for the newer, longer lasting, local anesthetics
available today.
Sources
1.
Adverse Drug Interactions in Dental Practicehttp://www.db.uth.tmc.edu/faculty/vlewis/Vahnspage/2561/Drug_Interactions.htm#locals
2.
Allergy to Local Anesthetics
"http://www.theberries.ns.ca/Archives/anaesthetics.html"
3.
Brief History of Products and Services
http://www.septodont.ca/Novocol/english/main/History.htm
4.
Clinical Trial Update
http://www.aegis.com/news/bw/1999/BW990715.html
5.Current
Medicinal Chemistry
Central
Nervous System Agents
http://www.bentham.org/cmccnsa/index2.htm
6.
Everything2http://www.everything2.com/index.pl
7.History
of Dentistry
http://cudental.creighton.edu/htm/history.htm
8.
Journal of Bangladesh Orthopedic Society
http://www.bdorth.org/Journal005.html
9."Local
Anesthetics"http://nnd40.med.navy.mil/Gen_Dent/Gen_Dent/Pearlsd6.HTMClassificatio
10.
Ray, Oakley: Drugs, Society, and Human Behavior, Boston, 1999.
11.
The Physiology of Analgesia
http://www.staffs.ac.uk/schools/sciences/psychology/coursematerials/pain/pptfiles/Physiology%20of%20Analgesia.ppt
12.
The Pharmaceutical Industry 1905-52
http://www.aphanet.org/about/sesquisept01.html
13.
Tortora, Gerard: Introduction to the Human Body 5th Edition, New York,
2001.
14.Vasoconstrictors
added to local anesthetic solutions
http://www.pharmacology2000.com/Central/Local_Anes/LAobj1.htm#Vasocontrictors%20added%20to%20local%20anesthetic%20solutions
15.
Weil, Andrew: From Chocolate to Morphine, New York, 1998.
Compiled
by: Mee-Na Walker
February
2003