๐Ÿ’Š Medicinal Chemistry Notes: Antihistaminic Drugs (H1 & H2 Blockers)For B.Pharm / D.Pharm / M.Pharm Students – PharmaEasyNotes

๐Ÿ“Œ Introduction
Antihistaminic drugs are medicines that block the action of histamine, a chemical released during allergic reactions.
Histamine causes: ๐Ÿ‘‰ Sneezing, itching, redness
๐Ÿ‘‰ Swelling, watery eyes
๐Ÿ‘‰ Increased gastric acid secretion
To control these effects, antihistamines are used in allergy and acid-related disorders.
๐Ÿงฌ What is Histamine?
Histamine is a biogenic amine stored in mast cells and basophils.
It acts on receptors:
H1 → Allergy symptoms
H2 → Acid secretion
H3, H4 → CNS & immune system (less common in syllabus)
๐Ÿ‘‰ In medicinal chemistry, mainly H1 & H2 blockers are studied.
๐Ÿ“Š Classification of Antihistaminic Drugs (Flowchart)


Antihistaminic Drugs
                         |
          --------------------------------
          |                              |
      H1 Blockers                   H2 Blockers
          |                              |
  -------------------         ---------------------
  |                 |         |                   |
1st Generation   2nd Generation  Cimetidine     Ranitidine
(Drowsy)        (Non-drowsy)      Famotidine     Nizatidine
๐Ÿ”น H1 Blockers
✔️ First Generation (Sedative)
Diphenhydramine
Chlorpheniramine
Promethazine
Cyproheptadine
๐Ÿ‘‰ Cause drowsiness
✔️ Second Generation (Non-Sedative)
Loratadine
Cetirizine
Fexofenadine
Desloratadine
๐Ÿ‘‰ Less drowsiness
๐Ÿ”น H2 Blockers
Used to reduce gastric acid.
Examples:
Cimetidine
Ranitidine
Famotidine
Nizatidine
๐Ÿงช Chemical Structures (Examples)
๐Ÿ“Œ General Structural Features
H1 Blockers:
✔️ Two aromatic rings
✔️ Linker chain (2–3 atoms)
✔️ Terminal amine group
General Structure:
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Ar — X — Ar — (CH2)n — NR2
H2 Blockers:
✔️ Heterocyclic ring
✔️ Cyanoguanidine group (Cimetidine)
✔️ Flexible side chain
⚙️ Mechanism of Action (With Flowchart)
๐Ÿง  H1 Blockers – Mechanism
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Allergen → Histamine Release
          ↓
     H1 Receptor Activation
          ↓
   Itching + Sneezing + Swelling
          ↓
   H1 Blocker Blocks Receptor
          ↓
   Allergy Symptoms Reduced
✔️ They act as H1 receptor antagonists
✔️ Prevent histamine binding
๐Ÿง  H2 Blockers – Mechanism
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Histamine → H2 Receptor (Stomach)
           ↓
      Acid Secretion ↑
           ↓
    Ulcer / GERD

H2 Blocker → Blocks Receptor
           ↓
     Acid Secretion ↓
           ↓
     Healing of Ulcer
✔️ Reduce gastric acid production
✔️ Useful in peptic ulcer & GERD
๐Ÿฉบ Therapeutic Uses
✔️ H1 Blockers
✅ Allergic rhinitis
✅ Urticaria (hives)
✅ Motion sickness
✅ Cold & flu
✅ Skin allergy
✔️ H2 Blockers
✅ Peptic ulcer
✅ GERD
✅ Zollinger–Ellison syndrome
✅ Acid reflux
⚠️ Side Effects
๐Ÿ”น H1 Blockers
First Generation: ❗ Drowsiness
❗ Dry mouth
❗ Blurred vision
❗ Constipation
Second Generation: ✔️ Less sedation
✔️ Mild headache
๐Ÿ”น H2 Blockers
❗ Diarrhea
❗ Headache
❗ Confusion (elderly)
❗ Hormonal effect (Cimetidine)
๐Ÿ“š Structure–Activity Relationship (SAR)
๐Ÿ”ฌ H1 Blockers
✔️ Two aromatic rings → Activity ↑
✔️ Tertiary amine → Binding ↑
✔️ Optimal chain length → 2–3 carbons
๐Ÿ”ฌ H2 Blockers
✔️ Electron-withdrawing group → Potency ↑
✔️ Flexible side chain → Better binding
๐Ÿ“ Important Exam Notes (Quick Revision)
✅ Histamine is a biogenic amine
✅ H1 → Allergy | H2 → Acid
✅ First gen → Sedative
✅ Second gen → Non-sedative
✅ Cimetidine → Enzyme inhibitor
✅ Loratadine → Long acting
๐Ÿ“ฆ Comparison Table
Feature
H1 Blockers
H2 Blockers
Main Use
Allergy
Acid control
Receptor
H1
H2
Sedation
Yes (1st gen)
No
Example
Cetirizine
Famotidine
๐ŸŒŸ Summary
Antihistaminic drugs are essential medicines used in allergy and acid disorders.
Understanding their classification, structure, mechanism, and SAR is very important for pharmacy students.
✔️ H1 blockers → Allergy control
✔️ H2 blockers → Acid suppression
✔️ Both are important in medicinal chemistry
๐Ÿ“ข For More Notes
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