Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (analgesia)
28,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Flupirtine, a chemically unique, orally effective, non-narcotic, centrally acting analgesic was evaluated for efficacy and safety in five parallel, double-blind randomized clinical trials which included both placebo and active control comparisons. Flupirtine was given in oral doses of 100 to 300 mg, with a maximum daily dose of 600 mg to patients with pain resulting from episiotomy, surgical or dental procedures. Patients rated pain intensity, pain relief and adverse experiences at regular intervals up to 6 hours following medication. Assessments of efficacy included measures of the sum of pain intensity differences (SPID), total pain relief (TOPAR) and peak analgesia (PPID). More than 1300 patients have been evaluated at 26 study sites in the United States. More than 170 of them received flupirtine 100 mg, 250 received 200 mg and 50 received 300 mg. An additional 415 patients received positive control medications (paracetamol 650 mg, codeine 60 mg, pentazocine 50 mg or oxycodone 10 mg plus paracetamol 650 mg). All doses of flupirtine produced analgesia after a single dose. Pharmacokinetic evaluations have shown linear kinetics for flupirtine and a 100 mg t.i.d. dosage schedule produces average steady-state blood levels equivalent to the peak response for a single 200 mg dose. Adverse experiences occurring in flupirtine clinical studies have been minimal in incidence, nature and degree, with drowsiness being the most frequently reported reaction (approximately 10%).
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PMID:Clinical experience with flupirtine in the U.S. 332 54

This randomized, controlled trial compared the analgesic efficacy and safety of the new oxycodone 10-mg/acetaminophen 325-mg formulation (Percocet) for the treatment of acute pain following oral surgery with double the dose of oxycodone alone (controlled-release [CR] oxycodone 20 mg [OxyContin]). A total of 150 male and female patients with > or = 2 full or partial bone-impacted mandibular molars, at least moderate persistent pain, and moderate trauma received a single dose of combination agent, CR oxycodone, or placebo following oral surgery and rated pain intensity and pain relief over the next 6 hours. The intent-to-treat population comprised 141 patients (55 on combination agent, 56 on oxycodone, and 30 on placebo). Combination agent and CR oxycodone were significantly superior to placebo for all efficacy measures. Combination agent was statistically superior to CR oxycodone in four of five outcome measures of pain intensity and pain relief (PPID, PPAR, SPID, and SPRID). It also provided a faster onset and 24% reduction in the number of patients reporting treatment-related adverse events compared with twice the dose of opioid alone. This new formulation offers the combination of two analgesic drugs with complementary mechanisms of action, which results in enhanced analgesia, an "opioid-sparing" effect, and an improved side effect and safety profile.
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PMID:Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled comparison of the analgesic efficacy of oxycodone 10 mg/acetaminophen 325 mg versus controlled-release oxycodone 20 mg in postsurgical pain. 1263 99