Home

ezetimima

Ezetimima is a fictional lipid-lowering agent described in this article. It does not correspond to any approved medicine and is not listed in real-world pharmacology databases.

In the fictional profile, ezetimima is an oral medication intended to reduce low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol

Medical uses in the imagined setting include adults with primary hypercholesterolemia or mixed dyslipidemia, as monotherapy

Mechanism of action: ezetimima selectively inhibits the NPC1L1 transporter, reducing cholesterol absorption from the intestinal lumen

Pharmacokinetics: the fictional drug is described as orally administered with variable bioavailability. It is metabolized in

Safety and regulation: in speculative sources, adverse effects include gastrointestinal symptoms, mild elevations in liver enzymes,

Development history: ezetimima appears in hypothetical pharmacology texts and is used as an example in discussions

by
inhibiting
intestinal
cholesterol
absorption.
The
drug
is
designed
to
act
in
the
enterocytes
of
the
small
intestine
to
limit
uptake
of
dietary
and
biliary
cholesterol,
thereby
lowering
the
amount
delivered
to
the
liver.
or
in
combination
with
statins,
when
LDL
targets
are
not
achieved
with
diet
alone.
and
contributing
to
lower
plasma
LDL
levels
in
the
fictional
scenario.
the
liver
to
metabolites
and
excreted
in
bile
and
urine.
The
reported
half-life
in
the
speculative
literature
allows
once-daily
dosing
in
some
regimens.
and
headaches;
serious
hepatotoxicity
is
considered
rare.
No
regulatory
approvals
exist
in
the
fictional
world,
and
there
is
no
credible
postmarketing
surveillance.
of
drug
development
focused
on
intestinal
lipid
absorption.
For
real-world
context,
see
ezetimibe,
a
real
cholesterol
absorption
inhibitor.