Interesting article on Ketoconazole - Main nizoral ingredient

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Ketoconazole
Ketoconazole is an azole medicine used to treat fungal infections. It is effective against a broad spectrum of fungi including:

Dermatophytes (tinea infections)
Yeasts such as candida and malassezia.
In New Zealand, ketoconazole is available as 200 mg Tablets (Nizoral®) on prescription. Pharmaceutical Schedule subsidy of the capsules requires Specialist recommendation. Oral ketoconazole is less often prescribed than in past years, because the newer azole drugs, itraconazole and fluconazole, are less likely to upset liver function.

Ketoconazole 2% Cream (Nizoral Cream®) daily and 2% Shampoo (Nizoral®, Sebizole®) twice weekly are used for seborrhoeic dermatitis, a common scaly rash affecting scalp and face. They are subsidised on prescription, but can also be obtained over the counter at a chemist.

Ketoconazole binds to the fungal p450 enzymes and stops the cells making ergosterol, the main component of the cell wall.

The medication is somewhat better absorbed orally when it is taken with a fatty meal or acidic drink (e.g. orange juice). It is bound to proteins such as albumin in the circulating blood and is widely distributed in body tissues. It takes three to ten hours for half of the medication to be cleared from the blood stream. The rest is eliminated in faeces and urine either unchanged or after conversion by the liver into inactive compounds.

Ketoconazole reaches the surface of the skin through normal blood circulation, sweat and sebum (skin oils). Very high concentrations of the drug develop within the skin, so it is effective in treating superficial fungal infections.

Dose regime
The oral dose of ketoconazole in adults is 200 - 400 mg daily, taken for two to eight weeks (a single dose may be effective for pityriasis versicolor). Nail infections are treated for up to twelve months.

The dose in children is usually 50 mg per day for those weighing less than 20 kg and 100mg daily for those 20-40 kg.

Side effects
The main concern with ketoconazole is the risk of liver problems, usually after it has been taken for prolonged periods (weeks). Side effects may include:

Nausea and vomiting.
Constipation.
Headache.
Dizziness.
Abnormal liver function tests (15%); severe hepatitis can occur in 1:10,000 patients.
Allergic skin rash including urticaria.
Endocrine effects including enlarged breasts (in males), alopecia and impotence.
Ketoconazole should not be taken in pregnancy. Although only excreted in tiny amounts from breast milk, it should only be taken by a breast-feeding mother if essential.

Drug interactions
Unfortunately, ketoconazole can interact with other medications.

As ketoconazole needs acid for its absorption, antacids, H2 antagonists (cimetidine, famotidine, ranitidine) and omeprazole should not be taken for 2 hours after ketoconazole.

Ketoconazole interacts with alcohol rather like disulfiram (Antabuse®) and can cause severe nausea and vomiting.

Ketoconazole may increase the concentration of these drugs and enhance their effect:

Warfarin
Methyl prednisolone
Cisapride
The antihistamines astemizole (Hismanal®) and terfenadine (Teldane®)
ciclosporin
Midazolam, triazolam
Busulphan
HMG Co-A reductase inhibitors (atorvastatin, fluvastatin, pravastatin, simvastatin)
Antidiabetic sulphonylurea medication (tolbutamide, glibenclamide, gliclazide, glipizide
The following drugs markedly decrease the concentration of ketoconazole:

Rifampicin
Isoniazid
Phenytoin
Carbamazepine
Ketoconazole is not thought to interact with the oral contraceptive pill.
 

Hotlegs

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Even though that post is entirely referenced to the oral version of ketoconazole and all the interactions, side effects and so on do not apply to the topical version I am sure there will be a few who read things like that and freak out.

I am not sure what relevance this has to hair loss?
 

Bryan

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BTW, it should be mentioned that ketoconazole is an androgen receptor blocker, but NOT the other -azole drugs miconazole and fluconazole.

Bryan
 
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