Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty-one separate self-injections of ketorolac tromethamine (Toradol) by 16 patients diagnosed with episodic migraine with or without aura were evaluated over a 90-day period for safety, efficacy of pain reduction, and the ability of this therapy program to prevent the necessitation of emergency room acute care. Prior to initiation of treatment, patients were formally instructed on intramuscular injection techniques by a member of our nursing staff. Patients were instructed to call upon the onset of a severe headache interfering with daily functioning and, then, were permitted to proceed with the injection. Headache intensity ratings were collected prior to injection and intermittently for the following twenty-four hours. The results demonstrate safety and efficacy of this form of therapy. A significant percent of ketorolac usages (64%) resulted in a good response and significant reduction in head pain. Twenty-three percent of ketorolac usages resulted in a mild response and only 13% of usages provided no relief. Furthermore, 13% of all usages failed to prevent the necessitation for emergency room treatment. The results are discussed in terms of the impact of self-injection on pain relief and substantial cost-reduction by decreasing emergency room utilization.
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PMID:Self-administration of parenteral ketorolac tromethamine for head pain. 144 89

Providing adequate pain control with minimal side effects in inpatient and ambulatory settings is a continuous challenge to the PACU nurse. Ketorolac tromethamine (Toradol, Syntex, Palo Alto, CA) is a new parenteral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) approved for use in the United States. Ketorolac is useful in the management of short term, moderate to severe postoperative pain. It is used by itself or as an adjunct to traditional opioid analgesics. Ketorolac, like other NSAIDs, has analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and antipyretic properties. Unlike morphine or meperidine, ketorolac does not bind to opioid receptors and is not a centrally acting agent. Administered intramuscularly, peak plasma levels are reached in 45 to 50 minutes. It is administered as a 30- or 60-mg intramuscular (IM) loading dose followed by 15- or 30-mg doses IM every 6 hours, with a maximum first-day dose of 150 mg and 120 mg on subsequent days up to a recommended maximum of 5 days. The lower dose range is recommended for elderly patients, patients weighing less than 50 kg, and patients with impaired kidney function. Initial studies show that use of ketorolac decreases the overall amount of opioid analgesia needed for postoperative pain control. To date, reported occurrence of side effects is low. A case study presents a healthy ambulatory surgical patient admitted for inguinal hernia repair using epidural anesthesia. Use of ketorolac has shown initial favorable results. More research is needed to further define its role and side effects in postoperative pain management.
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PMID:Ketorolac: a new parenteral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug for postoperative pain management. 149 90

Ketorolac was compared with papaveretum followed by paracetamol plus dextropropoxyphene orally, for postoperative pain relief in elderly orthopaedic patients. Seventy-two patients over the age of 65 years were entered into a double-blind, randomised trial. Pain and pain relief were recorded during an intramuscular and an oral phase, lasting up to 8 days, and a global assessment was made at the end of the study. No difference was demonstrated between the two treatment groups. The incidence of side effects was similar in both groups. It was concluded that ketorolac could provide pain relief equivalent to papaveretum for many patients.
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PMID:Ketorolac for postoperative analgesia in elderly patients. 153 86

This case report describes a general anesthetic where ketorolac tromethamine was used instead of a narcotic. The patient was a 37-year-old male, ASA II category, who underwent general anesthesia for a cholecystectomy. The drug is discussed in terms of preoperative, intraoperative, and immediate postoperative effects. During the preoperative phase, no effect was demonstrated. Intraoperatively, the drug performed poorly to attenuate responses to intense stimulation as noted by an increase in pulse and blood pressure of greater than 20% during intubation, incision, and abdominal wall retraction. During the immediate postoperative phase, the drug performed well to provide analgesia related to incisional pain. Ketorolac has not been previously discussed in terms of intraoperative uses. The mechanism of action by which it provides analgesia is through the inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis. It is similar in structure to the other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and may offer certain advantages over traditional agents used to provide analgesia, including the absence of respiratory depression, addictive potential, euphoria, a decrease in gastric motility, and cardiovascular effects. These properties may help in the management of certain types of patients who are at risk for respiratory depression or in those who have a contraindication to narcotics.
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PMID:Ketorolac tromethamine: a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory analgesic used as an adjunct for general anesthesia. 163 59

Twelve patients presenting to an emergency department in headache crisis were treated with Ketorolac tromethamine 60 mg. intramuscularly. All improved sufficiently to require no further emergent treatment. There was statistically significant improvement on all segments of the short form McGill Pain Questionnaire. This open label trial suggests that Ketorolac Tromethamine may be a useful agent in the treatment of headache crisis, and a controlled study to examine this is warranted.
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PMID:Ketorolac in acute headache management. 177 62

A total of 100 patients were enrolled after orthopaedic surgery in a multiple-dose, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group study to compare the analgesic efficacy and safety of 10 mg ketorolac tromethamine given orally four times daily for 3 days with 500 mg diflunisal given orally twice daily plus placebo twice daily for 3 days. Ketorolac was significantly (P = 0.04) superior to diflunisal in reducing the pain severity during the first 9 h of treatment; a difference possibly related to the more flexible dosage regimen of ketorolac. Patients and the investigator, however, rated ketorolac and diflunisal as being equally effective in terms of the overall drop in severity of pain and pain relief at the end of days 1, 2 and 3. Ketorolac-treated patients reported a total of nine adverse events and diflunisal-treated patients reported 13. It is concluded that in the treatment of acute post-operative pain a drug with a more flexible dosage regimen may provide superior pain relief.
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PMID:Comparative multiple-dose study of ketorolac tromethamine and diflunisal for pain following orthopaedic surgery. 193 10

Ketorolac IM was compared to DHE and metoclopramide IV in migraine patients whose regular abortive medication had failed and who presented to a headache clinic for acute treatment. Pain scale ratings and ratings of ability to function were recorded before and after injection. Ketorolac provided moderate relief in headache in six of nine patients compared to eight of nine given DHE and metoclopramide. The average improvement in patients receiving DHE and metoclopramide was greater in pain (p = .031) and disability scores (p = .057), than in those patients given ketorolac.
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PMID:Ketorolac versus DHE and metoclopramide in the treatment of migraine headaches. 196 56

Ketorolac tromethamine is the first injectable nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug approved for the management of acute pain. In analgesic potency and ability to relieve postoperative pain, it is comparable to morphine. The advantages of ketorolac over opiates are the absence of respiratory depression and lack of drug abuse potential. Ketorolac has a longer duration of action than morphine, but it has less effect on the central nervous system. Ketorolac should not be used for obstetric analgesia.
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PMID:Ketorolac: an injectable NSAID. 198 89

Ketorolac tromethamine, a potent nonnarcotic prostaglandin synthetase-inhibiting analgesic, was compared with meperidine for relief of moderate to severe postoperative pain. In a double-blind, randomized study, 125 patients received single intramuscular doses of ketorolac 30 or 90 mg or meperidine 50 or 100 mg. The degree of pain and pain relief were quantified verbally and with visual analog scales at baseline and 30 minutes, then hourly for 6 hours. Ketorolac 30 and 90 mg were significantly superior to meperidine 50 mg in six of nine efficacy measures. The onset of and peak analgesic effect of both doses of ketorolac and of meperidine were equivalent. Compared with both doses of meperidine, the two doses of ketorolac exhibited significantly longer duration of analgesic effect, as measured by the percentage of patients who terminated the study because of inadequate pain relief. The frequency of side effects was not significantly different between the drugs. The prolonged efficacy of intramuscular ketorolac combined with the reduced risk of respiratory depression suggest an important use of this drug for the relief of postoperative pain.
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PMID:Efficacy and safety of single doses of intramuscular ketorolac tromethamine compared with meperidine for postoperative pain. 208 12

A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel study in 542 patients with moderate or severe postoperative pain compared the analgesic efficacy and safety of intramuscular ketorolac 30 mg (324 patients), morphine 6 mg (110 patients), and morphine 12 mg (108 patients) administered as needed as often as every 2 hours for a maximum of 20 doses or 5 days. The efficacy of ketorolac 30 mg was comparable to that of morphine 12 mg on every efficacy measure (average pain intensity, average pain relief, mean overall medication rating, and percentage of patients withdrawing because of inadequate relief). Ketorolac was statistically superior to morphine 6 mg for average pain intensity and mean overall rating. Ketorolac-treated patients had fewer adverse events than those who received either morphine dose.
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PMID:Comparison of repeat doses of intramuscular ketorolac tromethamine and morphine sulfate for analgesia after major surgery. 208 13


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