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Disease&Treatment/Glaucoma
Pharmacology and side effects of oral carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (Oral CAI, acetazolamide/methazolamide)
eye_doc 2025. 4. 20. 04:29๐ Oral Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors (CAI) for Glaucoma
Oral CAIs reduce intraocular pressure by suppressing aqueous production.
Used when topical therapy is insufficient or urgent pressure lowering is needed.

๐งช Comparison Table
ItemAcetazolamideMethazolamide
Dose | 250mg up to 4/day | 50mg twice/day |
Half-life | 4 hours | 12โ15 hours |
Excretion | Renal | Hepatic |
Protein Binding | 95% | 55% |
Strengths | Strong effect, IV available | Less systemic absorption |
Limitations | Contraindicated in pregnancy, kidney caution | โ ๏ธ Risk of SJS |
โ Mnemonics:
- โHigh PPKโ โ Protein, Potency, Kidney = Acetazolamide
- โLow Systemic, Long Half-lifeโ โ Methazolamide

โ Key Side Effects
EffectNotes
Paresthesia, anorexia | Due to โK+, advise orange juice intake |
Metabolic acidosis | HCOโ- loss โ avoid in DM, COPD, liver issues |
Hematologic toxicity | WBCโ, PLTโ, pancytopenia |
Kidney stones | Rare in low doses, but possible in high-dose |
SJS (Stevens-Johnson) | Rare but severe, mainly with methazolamide |
โ Summary
- Oral CAIs are powerful IOP-lowering agents,
- but require caution due to systemic side effects, especially SJS