Benzatropine (INN), known as benztropine in the United States and Japan, is a medication used to treat movement disorders like parkinsonism and dystonia, as well as extrapyramidal side effects of antipsychotics, including akathisia. It is not useful for tardive dyskinesia. It is a centrally acting anticholinergic and antihistamine, taken by mouth or by intravenous or intramuscular. Benefits are seen within two hours and last for up to ten hours.
Common side effects include dry mouth, Blurred vision, nausea, and constipation. Serious side effect may include urinary retention, hallucinations, hyperthermia, and Ataxia. It is unclear if use during pregnancy or breastfeeding is safe. Benzatropine is an anticholinergic which works by blocking the activity of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors.
Benzatropine was approved for medical use in the United States in 1954. It is available as a generic medication. In 2020, it was the 229th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with more than 2million prescriptions. It is sold under the brand name Cogentin among others.
While some studies suggest that use of Anticholinergic increases the risk of tardive dyskinesia (a long-term side effect of Antipsychotic), other studies have found no association between anticholinergic exposure and risk of developing tardive dyskinesia, although symptoms may be worsened.
Drugs that decrease cholinergic transmission may impair storage of new information into long-term memory. Anticholinergic agents can also impair time perception.
Benzatropine has been also identified, by a high throughput screening approach, as a potent differentiating agent for , possibly working through M1 and M3 muscarinic receptors. In preclinical models for multiple sclerosis, benzatropine decreased clinical symptoms and enhanced re-myelination.
"Benztropine" is the official United States Adopted Name (USAN), the medication naming system coordinated by the USAN Council, co-sponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA), the United States Pharmacopeial Convention (USP), and the American Pharmacists Association (APhA). It is also the Japanese Accepted Name (JAN) and was used in Australia until 2015, when it was harmonized with the INN.
Both names may be modified to account for the methanesulfonate salt as which the medication is formulated: the modified INN (INNm) and BAN (BANM) is benzatropine mesilate, while the modified USAN is benztropine mesylate.
The misspelling benzotropine is also occasionally seen in the literature.
Medical uses
Adverse effects
Pharmacology
Pharmacodynamics
Antihistamine and anticholinergic activity
Atypical dopamine reuptake inhibition
Other actions
Other animals
Naming
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