- In vitro studies on the pharmacological properties of diacetolol, the major metabolite of acebutolol in man.
In vitro studies on the pharmacological properties of diacetolol, the major metabolite of acebutolol in man.
The cardioselectivity and specificity of diacetolol, the major metabolite of the beta-adrenoceptor blocking drug acebutolol, was studied in the isolated right atrium of the guinea-pig and rat and the papillary muscle and trachea of the guinea-pig. The beta-adrenoceptor blocking potency of diacetolol is about ten times lower than that of acebutolol. Like acebutolol, diacetolol was a more effective isoprenaline antagonist in the heart than in the trachea, thus showing relative cardioselectivity. The high water solubility of diacetolol and acebutolol led to a much faster disappearance of the beta-blockade after washout than the blockade by the lipid soluble agents propranolol and penbutolol. Like acebutolol, diacetolol had a weak intrinsic sympathomimetic activity. Cardiac depressant effects, e.g. decrease of maximum upstroke velocity and duration of the action potential and reduction in force of contraction, occurred with concentrations 100-1000 times higher than those needed for beta-blockade, thus indicating relative specificity.