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Dipyrone is one of the most commonly used non-opioid analgesic and antipyretic drug. Its anti-nociceptive and hypothermic effects have long been suspected to be centrally mediated. The involvement of the most recently discovered opioid peptide, nociceptin/orphanin FQ (N/OFQ), and its receptor (NOP) in pain transmission is controversial. It appears to be pro-nociceptive when administered supra-spinally, but exerts anti-nociceptive effects when injected spinally or systemically.
Objective
Investigation of the role of the N/OFQ system in paracetamol-induced anti-nociception and hypothermia led us to determine its role in the anti-nociceptive and hypothermic effects of dipyrone.
Material and Methods
Hot-plate and tail-flick tests were used to assess nociception, and a rectal thermometer was used to measure rectal temperature in mice.
Results
Mice injected with dipyrone (150, 300, 600 mg/kg, i.p.) displayed dose-related anti-nociception and hypothermia. The NOP receptor antagonist JTC-801 (3 mg/kg, i.p.), at a dose that exerted no effect when used alone, alleviated dipyrone-induced anti-nociception but did not reverse dipyrone-induced hypothermia.
Conclusion
We conclude that NOP receptors participate in the anti-nociceptive, but not in the hypothermic, effects of dipyrone.
We compared the efficacy of intravenous lornoxicam vs. dipyrone in
patient-controlled analgesia for postoperative analgesia.
Methods
The study included 105 patients who had undergone elective septorhinoplasty
after receiving general anaesthesia. Patients were divided into three groups
to receive lornoxicam (24 mg day−1), dipyrone (5 g
day−1) or placebo. Pain was evaluated using a
0–100 mm visual analogue scale at 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 20 and 24 h
postoperatively. Pethidine (1 mg kg−1) was
administered intramuscularly to patients requiring rescue analgesia.
Pethidine requirements were recorded during the first 24 h postoperatively,
and treatment-related adverse effects were noted.
Results
Postoperative pain scores were significantly lower with lornoxicam compared
with dipyrone at 8 h (P = 0.016). No
significant differences regarding pain scores at 2, 4, 6, 12, 16, 20 and 24
h were found. Significantly fewer patients in the lornoxicam group required
rescue analgesics (vs. dipyrone, P =
0.046; vs. placebo, P = 0.001); fewer
patients in the dipyrone group required rescue analgesics compared with
placebo (P = 0.008). Significantly fewer
patients in the lornoxicam group had nausea (vs. dipyrone, P = 0.022; vs. placebo, P = 0.006); no significant differences were found between
the other two groups. Antiemetic use was significantly lower in the
lornoxicam group (vs. dipyrone, P =
0.002; vs. placebo, P = 0.001).
Conclusions
Lornoxicam has better tolerability and is a more effective analgesic than
dipyrone when administered by patient-controlled analgesia for postoperative
analgesia after septorhinoplasty.
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