Articles: analgesics.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Ketorolac and indomethacin are equally efficacious for the relief of minor postoperative pain.
Injectable ketorolac is an effective analgesic in ambulatory surgery patients. However, no studies have compared ketorolac with other NSAIDs in this setting. The analgesic efficacy of intramuscular ketorolac, rectal indomethacin and placebo was compared in healthy women undergoing gynaecological or breast surgery as outpatients. ⋯ However, no differences were observed between the two NSAIDS. Side effects were similar in all groups. We conclude that im ketorolac and pr indomethacin are equally effective analgesics in this group of patients.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialPreliminary pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of an ultra-short-acting opioid: remifentanil (GI87084B).
Remifentanil is a newly synthesized 4-anilido-piperidine with an ester side chain susceptible to esterase metabolism. We evaluated the safety, analgesic efficacy, and pharmacokinetics of remifentanil in 48 male volunteers. Volunteers were randomized to receive increasing doses of remifentanil, alfentanil, or placebo. ⋯ Remifentanil had a small volume of distribution of 0.39 (SD, +/- 0.25) L/kg (alfentanil, 0.52 +/- 2 L/kg), with a rapid distribution phase of 0.94 (SD, +/- 0.57) min and an extremely short elimination half-life of 9.5 (SD, +/- 4) min compared with an elimination half-life of alfentanil of 58 (SD, +/- 7.6) min. The t1/2 ke0 (half-time for equilibration between plasma and the effect compartment) of remifentanil for analgesia was calculated as 1.3 min. Thus, remifentanil appears to have a pharmacologic profile similar to other potent mu agonists, but with exceptionally short-lasting pharmacokinetics, which is likely to make it a very useful opioid for clinical practice.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Postoperative pain therapy. The efficacy of a serotonin antagonist (GR 38032F;ondansetron) and the prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor lysin acetylsalicylate (Aspisol)].
Serotonin is one of the many neurotransmitters involved in nociception. Serotonin antagonists may therefore reduce postoperative pain. In the present study we examined whether the new 5-HT3 receptor antagonist GR 38032F (ondansetron) reduced postoperative pain after minor surgery and compared its effectiveness with that of lysin acetyl salicylate (Aspisol). ⋯ For 42 out of 100 patients no analgesics were needed within the first 3 h after end of surgery. Ondansetron was no more effective than placebo in reducing postoperative pain. Lysin acetylsalicylate, however, may be an effective alternative to opioids for the treatment of postoperative pain.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Sep 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialSerial intravenous doses of dezocine, morphine, and nalbuphine in the management of postoperative pain for outpatients.
Adult patients who had arthroscopic surgery under general anesthesia and requested postoperative pain relief were randomized to receive treatment in a double-blind protocol with 5 mg of intravenous dezocine (20 patients), morphine (22 patients), nalbuphine (18 patients), or saline (24 patients). At 10-min intervals, starting with the first dose of analgesic, patients could choose up to three additional doses of the primary treatment, or choose an alternative analgesic if the primary drug was unsatisfactory. One to four doses of morphine were given as the alternate treatment if the initial treatment was dezocine or nalbuphine, and one to four doses of dezocine were given if the initial treatment was saline or morphine. ⋯ As an alternate analgesic in this study, dezocine required fewer doses to achieve patient satisfaction and was thus more efficacious than morphine. The incidence of treatment-related, adverse effects was different from that of saline or other treatments only for nalbuphine-related pain or burning on injection and dezocine-related facial itching. With respect to analgesic actions and side effects, dezocine seems more like morphine than nalbuphine.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Aug 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialUse of ketorolac and fentanyl during outpatient gynecologic surgery.
In healthy outpatients undergoing minor gynecologic surgery, the analgesic efficacy of ketorolac was compared to fentanyl and to a combination of the two analgesics. One hundred and nine patients were randomly selected to receive fentanyl 50-100 micrograms, ketorolac 30-60 mg, or a combination of fentanyl 50-100 micrograms and ketorolac 30-60 mg, intravenously (IV). Anesthesia was induced with midazolam 2 mg IV and propofol 1 mg/kg, IV, and maintained with propofol, 50-160 micrograms.kg-1.min-1, IV, and nitrous oxide 67% in oxygen via a face mask. ⋯ Although there were no significant differences in intraoperative mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and oxygen saturation of hemoglobin values among the three treatment groups, the ketorolac group manifested significantly more rapid respiratory rates throughout the procedure compared with the fentanyl and combination groups. Recovery times, postoperative side effects, and pain scores, as well as postoperative analgesic and antiemetic requirements, were similar in all three treatment groups. However, the ketorolac group reported significantly higher pain scores in the early postoperative period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)