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Analgesic drugs

Analgesic drugs. MBChB: Y2. This talk. Pain: classification Brief resume of common arthritides Paracetamol NSAIDs Drugs for gout Not covered: Opiates, ‘disease modifying drugs for rheumatoid, drugs for neurogenic pain. Pain. Somatic inflammation of epithelial surfaces, trauma, sepsis

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Analgesic drugs

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  1. Analgesic drugs MBChB: Y2

  2. This talk • Pain: classification • Brief resume of common arthritides • Paracetamol • NSAIDs • Drugs for gout • Not covered: • Opiates, ‘disease modifying drugs for rheumatoid, drugs for neurogenic pain.

  3. Pain • Somatic • inflammation of epithelial surfaces, trauma, sepsis • felt at site of pathology • Visceral • e.g. myocardial ischaemia, colic • poor localisation, often ‘referred’ • Neurogenic • e.g. neuralgia • no response to analgesics

  4. Osteoarthritis • Common • A disease of cartilage • Big weight-bearing joints: knees and hips • More likely if there is joint insult (e.g. trauma) • Congenital component: ‘primary familial osteoartritis’

  5. Heberden’s nodes

  6. Rheumatoid arthritis • Common • May commence at any age • Inflammatory condition: joints are the commonest ‘tissues’ involved, but rheumatoid also inflames arteries etc. • Small joints: hands and feet • Hands: the MCPJs and the PIPJs

  7. Gout • Common • A PAROXYSMAL arthritis, with quiet joints between attacks. • Any joint, excepting the axial skeleton. • Most commonly the first MTPJ • Uric acid crystals in joint fluid

  8. Ankylosing spondylitis • Less common • About 20% of people with HLA B27 • Low back pain in the early 20s, leading to variable degrees of spinal deformity. • Arthritis also of hips and knees • Other tissues: iritis

  9. Drugs

  10. Paracetamol • Mechanism of analgesic activity not fully understood: ?  prostaglandin synthesis in the CNS • Mechanism of antipyretic activity:  PG-E2 in the hypothalamus

  11. Paracetamol • Safe effective analgesic used OTC • analgesia • lowering elevated temperature • it has no anti-inflammatory effect

  12. Dangerous in overdose

  13. Dangerous in overdose saturated

  14. Dangerous in overdose The main problem is hepatotoxicity Takes around 24-36 h to become apparent saturated Antidote: n-acetyl cycteine But use in the first 24 h Damage correlates with paracetamol conc. Measure conc. No earlier than 4 h

  15. NSAIDs

  16. Phospholipase A2 Arachidonic acid COX-I COX-II Leukotrienes PGs with gastric protective effects PGs with inflammatory effects Membrane phospholipid

  17. steroids X Membrane phospholipid Phospholipase A2 Arachidonic acid COX-I COX-II Leukotrienes PGs with gastric protective effects PGs with inflammatory effects

  18. steroids X Membrane phospholipid Phospholipase A2 Older NSAIDs Arachidonic acid X X COX-I COX-II Leukotrienes PGs with gastric protective effects PGs with inflammatory effects

  19. steroids X Membrane phospholipid Phospholipase A2 Arachidonic acid COX-II inh X COX-I COX-II Leukotrienes PGs with gastric protective effects PGs with inflammatory effects

  20. Aspirin • Acetylsalicylic acid • Analgesic/antipyretic at low dose • Anti-inflammatory at high dose • (Anti-platelet activity at low dose) • Upper GI irritation and bleeding

  21. Aspirin Overdose • Partly eliminated unchanged in the urine. • Aspirin is a strong acid, and is lipid soluble at acid pH (remember Henderson Hasselbach). • ‘Alkaline diuresis’: iv bicarbonate to yield alkaline urine. • Hence water soluble aspirin and higher aspirin clearance. • Dialysis in the most serious cases.

  22. Other NSAIDs • (Ibuprofen: OTC as an analgesic) • Naproxen • Diclofenac • Useful in inflammatory arthritis • Useful adjunct to opiates in terminal care

  23. COX-II inhibitors • Anti-inflammatory, useful for Rh-D • Much more expensive than older NSAIDs • Reserve for selected patients with PUD or GORD. • Rofecoxib withdrawn for SAEs. This may prove to be a class effect.

  24. NSAID adverse effects • GI • Salt and water retention • Renal impairment • Asthma may be precipitated

  25. Drugs for gout.

  26. Acute gout. • Paroxysmal arthritis. Any joint (other than the axial skeleton) but 1st MTPJ is the commonest. • Commonly precipitated by diuretics (esp thiazides). • May be very severe and resemble septic arthritis. • Joint aspirate: uric acid crystals.

  27. Treating acute gout. • Rest. • NSAID until arthritis settles. • Worst cases merit prednisolone. • If prophylactic drug, such as allopurinol, is to be used then NSAID ‘cover’.

  28. Allopurinol • Purine bases metabolised via xanthines to uric acid. • Xanthines are water soluble. • Uric acid is pretty insoluble. • Allopurinol inhibits xanthine oxidase. • Used to reduce frequency of paroxysms. • May precipitate acute gout when first started: NSAID ‘cover’.

  29. Allopurinol ADRs and interactions • GI upset • Rash • Azathioprine - potentiated. • Warfarin - potentiated.

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