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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Review article: the clinical pharmacology of proton pump inhibitors.

TLDR
Proton pump inhibitors inhibit the gastric H+/K+‐ATPase via covalent binding to cysteine residues of the proton pump through protonation and activation at the active secretory canaliculus of the parietal cell.
Abstract
Proton pump inhibitors inhibit the gastric H+/K+-ATPase via covalent binding to cysteine residues of the proton pump. All proton pump inhibitors must undergo acid accumulation in the parietal cell through protonation, followed by activation mediated by a second protonation at the active secretory canaliculus of the parietal cell. The relative ease with which these steps occur with different proton pump inhibitors underlies differences in their rates of activation, which in turn influence the location of covalent binding and the stability of inhibition. Slow activation is associated with binding to a cysteine residue involved in proton transport that is located deep in the membrane. However, this is inaccessible to the endogenous reducing agents responsible for restoring H+/K+-ATPase activity, favouring a longer duration of gastric acid inhibition. Pantoprazole and tenatoprazole, a novel proton pump inhibitor which has an imidazopyridine ring in place of the benzimidazole moiety found in other proton pump inhibitors, are activated more slowly than other proton pump inhibitors but their inhibition is resistant to reversal. In addition, tenatoprazole has a greatly extended plasma half-life in comparison with all other proton pump inhibitors. The chemical and pharmacological characteristics of tenatoprazole give it theoretical advantages over benzimidazole-based proton pump inhibitors that should translate into improved acid control, particularly during the night.

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Analysis of the Structural Diversity, Substitution Patterns, and Frequency of Nitrogen Heterocycles among U.S. FDA Approved Pharmaceuticals

TL;DR: This review reports on the top 25 most commonly utilized nitrogen heterocycles found in pharmaceuticals, and reports detailed substitution patterns, highlight common architectural cores, and discuss unusual or rare structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The resurgence of covalent drugs

TL;DR: The prevalence and pharmacological advantages of covalent drugs are surveyed, how potential risks and challenges may be addressed through innovative design, and the broad opportunities provided by targeted covalENT inhibitors are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of the synthetic routes to the best selling drugs containing 6-membered heterocycles

TL;DR: This review which is the second in this series summarises the most common synthetic routes as applied to the preparation of many modern pharmaceutical compounds categorised as containing a six-membered heterocyclic ring.
Journal ArticleDOI

25 Years of Proton Pump Inhibitors: A Comprehensive Review.

TL;DR: Despite their overall efficacy, PPIs do have some limitations related to their short plasma half-lives and requirement for meal-associated dosing, which can lead to breakthrough symptoms in some individuals, especially at night.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proton pump inhibitors: an update of their clinical use and pharmacokinetics.

TL;DR: This update of pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and clinical data will provide the necessary guide by which to select between the various PPIs that differ—based on pharmacodynamic assessments—in their relative potencies.
References
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From the authors

TL;DR: Findings, i.e. that as-needed AO provided for a period of 3 months had no effect on quality of life and walked distance, are against the stream of current guidelines.
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Appropriate acid suppression for the management of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease.

TL;DR: Preliminary meta-analysis shows that the healing rate of erosive oesophagitis at 8 weeks by antisecretory agents is directly related to the duration of suppression of gastric acid secretion achieved over a 24-hour period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy and safety of esomeprazole compared with omeprazole in GERD patients with erosive esophagitis: a randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Esomeprazoles demonstrates significantly greater efficacy than omeprazole in the treatment of GERD patients with erosive esophagitis and the tolerability and safety of esomeprazole are comparable to that of omepazole.
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