Nsaids Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: Maher Khdour Msc. Phd. Clinical Pharmacy
Nsaids Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: Maher Khdour Msc. Phd. Clinical Pharmacy
NONSTEROIDAL
ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DRUGS
Fever
Inflammation
NSAIDs: Mechanism of Action
Analgesia—treatment of headaches and
pain
Block the undesirable effects of
prostaglandins, which cause headaches
NSAIDs: Mechanism of Action
Antipyretic: reduce fever
Inhibit prostaglandin E2 within the area of the
brain that controls temperature
NSAIDs: Mechanism of Action
Relief of inflammation
Inhibit the leukotriene pathway, the
prostaglandin pathway, or both
Arachidonic Acid Pathway
Gastric Mucosa
Mucosal COX-1
Platelet COX-1
Tx A2
Platelet aggregation
& activation
Renal Circulation
Pg E2
Mediate
Support renal and
inflammation, pain,
platelet function Protect and fever
gastroduodenal
mucosa
NSAID Analgesic Effect
Central mechanisms (in the spinal cord)
NSAIDs are effective in:
Arthritis
Pain of muscular and vascular origin
Headache, toothache
In combination with opioids: decrease in
postoperative pain
Antiinflammatory Effect
NSAIDs reduce mainly components of the
inflammatory and immune response in
which the products of COX-2 action play a
significant part:
Vasodilatation
Edema
Pain
Unwanted effects: GI Disturbances
Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting
Nonacetylated
salicylamide
salsalate (Disalcid)
Sodium salicylate
NSAIDs: Propionic Acids
Ibuprofen (Motrin, others)
ketoprofen (Orudis)
ketorolac (Toradol)
naproxen (Naprosyn)
oxaprozin (Daypro)
NSAIDs: Other Agents
Enolic acids
phenylbutazone (Butazolidin)
piroxicam (Feldene)
Fenamic acids
meclofenamic acid (Meclomen)
mefenamic acid (Ponstel)
Nonacidic compounds
nabumetone (Relafen)
NSAIDs: Other Agents
COX-2 inhibitors
celecoxib (Celebrex®)
Aspirin
Acetylsalicylic acid
Salicylates
Non-aspirin salicylates: magnesium salicylate;
choline salicylate; choline magnesium
salicylate; Sodium salicylate.
Salsalate (Disalcid).
Dimer of salicylic acid.
expression of cyclooxygenase.
Therapeutic effects.
Analgesia.
decrease PG synthesis.
Drug interactions
Aspirin Pharmacokinetics
aggregation
GI effects increase bleeding;
normal or acid.
Treatment.
Symptomatic, but alkalinization of urine helps (high
toxic doses (>5g) cause nausea and vomiting, then, after 24-48 h,
potentially fatal liver damage by saturating normal conjugating
enzymes causing the drug to be converted by mixed function
oxidases to N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine. It this is not inactivated
Misoprostol (Cytotec) –.
Prostaglandin used to decrease GI inflammation with
salicylates or NSAIDS.
Overused and expensive, side effects include nausea and
severe diarrhea.
Diclofenac Injectable
Not Approved in US
Intramuscular injection
renal colic and biliary colic;
severe migraine attacks
Intravenous Injections:
Never Bolus
IV Infusion for moderate to severe post-
operative pain
Other NSAID’s
Phenylbutazone: additional uricosuric effect.
ADR: agranulocytosis, aplastic anemia.
Indomethacin: more potent anti-inflammatory,
side effects limit its use.
Common ADR’s. CNS: halucinations, depression,
seizures; GI abdominal pain.
Clinical use in short term treatment like gout
attacks.
Side Effects
GI Ulcerations and bleeding
Renal:
Patients with reduced renal blood flow or blood
Analgin®
Novalgin®
Reiter syndrome