Paracetamol metabolism in postoperative patients


Autoria(s): Murphy, Philip Gerard MacHale
Contribuinte(s)

Kennedy, Julia M.

Byrne, Stephen

Creaton, Geraldine

Data(s)

02/05/2012

02/05/2012

01/01/2012

19/01/2012

Resumo

Introduction: Despite being available for more than 50 years, there is still much to learn about paracetamol. Postoperative analgesic regimens that maintain good pain control while minimising exposure to opiates are beneficial and paracetamol has had a resurgence in this role since an IV formulation came to market. However there is evidence to suggest currently licensed doses are sub-therapeutic, especially when administered orally or rectally. Higher, unlicensed doses are now being advocated but, prior to this study, there was little evidence of their safety in surgical patients. When assessing drug safety in surgical patients a number of surgery and patient related factors influence results, and these must be considered. Methods: Major and intermediate surgical patients were recruited from two hospitals in Ireland. They were administered IV paracetamol at either 9g or 4g daily doses. In addition they received daily sub therapeutic doses of four other medicines to indicate the activity of their CYP450 enzymes that are involved in paracetamol metabolism. Urine and blood samples were collected to determine paracetamol pharmacokinetics, CYP450 activity, inflammatory cytokine concentration and for evidence of hepatotoxicity. Results: There were 33 patients that participated in the study. There was no evidence of clinically significant hepatotoxicity occurring in any patient during the study period, but there could have been changes following this time. Paracetamol disposition was shown to change, however half-life remained relatively constant. There were a number of changes to the way paracetamol was metabolised following surgery that maintained this rate of elimination. Conclusion: Doses of up to 9g per day given to major surgical patients for up to five days postoperatively produced no evidence of hepatotoxicity. Further research is warranted to determine the clinical utility of these higher doses

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Murphy, P.G., 2012. Paracetamol metabolism in postoperative patients. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/573

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2012, Philip Gerard MacHale Murphy

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Paracetamol #HPLC #Clinical study #Acetaminophen #Drugs--Metabolism #Pharmacokinetics #High performance liquid chromatography #Drugs--Testing
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PhD (Medicine & Health)