Pethidine
Pethidine is a synthetic opioid analgesic that acts mainly as a -opioid agonist. Pethidine is used for the relief of most types of moderate to severe acute pain including the pain of labour. It is more lipid soluble than morphine and has a less potent and shorter lasting analgesic effect; analgesia usually lasts for 2 to 4 hours. Its short duration of action and accumulation of its neurotoxic metabolite make it unsuitable for the management of chronic pain.
| Generic Name 藥名 | HA Code 藥物代碼 | Classification藥物分類 |
|---|---|---|
| Pethidine 1ml injection | PETH02 | DD |
Mechanism of Action[edit]
Equivalent doses of opioid analgesics
| Analgesic/Route | Dose |
|---|---|
| Codeine: PO | 100 mg |
| Diamorphine: IM, IV, SC | 3 mg |
| Dihydrocodeine: PO | 100 mg |
| Morphine: PO | 10 mg |
| Morphine: IM, IV, SC | 5 mg |
| Oxycodone: PO | 6.6 mg |
| Tramadol: PO | 100 mg |
| Route of Administration | SC, IV |
|---|
Dosage[edit]
For moderate to severe acute pain:
| Oral | 50-150 mg every 4 hours if necessary |
|---|---|
| Subcutaneous or intramuscular | 25-100 mg, then 25-100 mg after 4 hours |
| Intravenous | 25-50 mg, then, 25-50mg repeated after 4 hours |
In obstetric analgesia 50 to 100 mg may be given by intramuscular or subcutaneous injection as soon as contractions occur at regular intervals. This dose may be repeated after 1 to 3 hours if necessary up to a maxmum of 400 mg in 24 hours.
Doses in children
| Oral or intramuscular | 0.5 to 2mg/kg, repeated after 4 hours if necessary |
|---|
Side Effects[edit]
Euphoria, nausea and vomiting, respiratory depression, constipation and cough suppression.
For Opioid Analgesic in general[edit]
The commonest adverse effects are nausea, vomiting, constipation, drowsiness and confusion.
Large doses of opioids produce respiratory depression and hypotension, with circulatory failure and deepening coma. Death may occur from respiratory failure.
Treatment of Adverse Effects[edit]
- Constipation can be treated with laxatives such as senna tables and lactulose.
- Nausea and vomiting can be alleviated by metoclopramide.
- Intensive supportive therapy may be required to correct respiratory failure and shock. Naloxone is used for rapid reversal of the severe respiratory depression and coma.
Pharmacokinetics[edit]
| bioavailability | Pethidine hydrochloride is absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract, but only about 50% of the drug reaches the systemic circulation because of first-pass metabolism. Absorption after intramuscular injection is variable. |
|---|---|
| Onset of action | Peak plasma concentrations have been reported 1 to 2 hours after oral doses. It is about 60 to 80% bound to plasma proteins. |
| Elimination half-life | It has a plasma elimination half-life of about 3 to 6 hours. |
| Metabolism | Pethidine is metabolized in the liver. |
Drug Management[edit]
Efficiency[edit]
Pain control
Safety[edit]
mental status, blood pressure, respiratory drive, and misuse / overuse.
Caution[edit]
Not suitable for severe chronic pain.
In patients with a history of convulsive disorders or supraventricular tachycardias.
Tolerance and dependence
Interactions[edit]
- Prochlorperazine (STEMETIL) prolonged the respiratory depressant effect of pethidine.
- Enhanced CNS depression and hypotension when chlorpromazine given with pethidine.
- Life-threatening interaction reported between pethidine and selegiline, a selective monoamine oxidase inhibitor.
FAQ[edit]
What should I avoid while taking?[edit]
Avoid abrupt withdrawal
What happen if I overdose?[edit]
Emergency situation, called 999 immediately Antidote: Naloxone
What happen if I miss a dose?[edit]
Administered by professionals
