Artigo Revisado por pares

Double-Blind Oral Analgesic Study of Butorphanol in Episiotomy Pain: A Comparison with Codeine and Placebo

1978; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 6; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/030006057800600105

ISSN

1473-2300

Autores

Harvey M Levin, N.P. Sanzari, Manuel Losada, Frank Caruso,

Tópico(s)

Pharmacology and Obesity Treatment

Resumo

Butorphanol tartrate (8 mg and 16 mg), codeine phosphate (60 mg) and placebo were compared for oral analgesic activity and side-effects employing a double-blind design in 127 hospitalized women suffering from moderate to very severe post-partum episiotomy pain. The study duration was 24 hours with medication administered every 6 hours for a total of four doses per patient. The results demonstrate that butorphanol 8 mg, 16 mg and codeine 60 mg were all significantly better than placebo (p<0.05). The data indicate that both doses of butorphanol were longer-acting than codeine as determined by significant activity over codeine at the longer time intervals (4, 5 and 6 hours) after dosing. The onset of activity appeared to be 1 hour for butorphanol 8 mg as well as codeine 60 mg and 1/2 hour for butorphanol 16 mg. The peak effect occurred at 2 hours for all treatments. The duration of effect appeared to be 4 hours for codeine 60 mg, and longer, possibly 5 to 6 hours, for butorphanol 8 and 16 mg. All of the active treatments significantly improved the patient's ability to “get a good night's sleep” which was impaired before treatment. The longer duration of action for butorphanol 8 and 16 mg over codeine 60 mg was also reflected in these parameters. Generally, the incidence of side-effects in this study was low with the active treatments presenting a higher incidence than placebo but similar to each other. No serious side-effects were observed in this study. The most common side-effects were drowsiness for butorphanol and nausea for codeine.

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