Phentolamine (Regitine, OraVerse)
Updated On: July 10, 2026
1-2 min
~2 min
10-30 min
Pheochromocytoma - Drug of choice for intraoperative hypertensive crises during tumor manipulation, given as 1-5 mg IV boluses.
Extravasation rescue - Antidote for alpha-agonist (norepinephrine, phenylephrine, dopamine) extravasation; 5-10 mg in 10 mL saline infiltrated into the affected area.
Rapid brief effect - Onset 1-2 min with short duration; titrate by repeat boluses or infusion.
Unopposed alpha caution - Reflex tachycardia is common, but never give a beta-blocker before adequate alpha blockade in pheochromocytoma.
Excessive effect - Treat hypotension with fluids, Trendelenburg, and norepinephrine; avoid epinephrine (epinephrine reversal causes paradoxical hypotension).
Drug Interactions - Potentiates other antihypertensives; classic epinephrine reversal (paradoxical hypotension when epinephrine given after alpha blockade).
Pediatric Implications - Extravasation dose 0.05-0.1 mg/kg (max 5 mg); pheochromocytoma dosing is weight-based.
Obstetric Implications - Limited data; used for pheochromocytoma crisis in pregnancy when clearly needed.
Absolute:
Recent myocardial infarction
Coronary insufficiency, angina
Relative:
Peptic ulcer disease
Pre-existing hypotension
Caution:
Elderly
Cerebrovascular disease
Pheochromocytoma: 1-5 mg IV; pediatric 0.05-0.1 mg/kg (max 5 mg).
Extravasation: 5-10 mg in 10 mL normal saline, subcutaneous infiltration of affected area.
5 mg IM (pheochromocytoma preoperative preparation)
Competitive nonselective antagonism of alpha-1 and alpha-2 adrenergic receptors, producing vasodilation.
Hepatic
Renal
Reconstitute lyophilized powder to 5 mg/mL.
Also marketed as OraVerse for reversal of dental soft-tissue anesthesia.