Pethidine
[SH4:p102-104]
aka: meperidine
Use
- Analgesia during labor and delivery and post-operatively
- Pethidine is the only opioid considered adequate for surgery when used intrathecally
- Suppressing postoperative shivering
NOT useful in:
- Not useful for treating diarrhoea
- Not useful as an antitussive
Structure
- Synthetic opioid agonist at MOP and KOP receptors
Structural similarity to local anaesthetics and atropine
- Shares some structural features with local anaesthetics
* A tertiary amine
* An ester group
* Lipophilic phenyl group
--> Intrathecal meperidine blocks Na+ channels like lignocaine
- Also some structural similarity with atropine
--> Mild atropine-like antispasmodic effect
Pharmacodynamics
Potency
- About 1/10 as potent as morphine
--> 80-100mg of meperidine (IM) = 10 mg of morphine (IM)
- At equal analgesic dose, similar side-effect profile as morphine
Mechanism of action
Agonist activity at
- MOP receptors (predominant effect)
- KOP receptors (10% of its activities)
- Alpha2 receptors
Effects
Analgesia
May be effective in suppressing post-operative shivering
* Due to stimulation of KOP receptors and alpha2 receptors
* Also due to a drug-induced decrease in the shivering threshold (which is different from alfentanil, clonidine, propofol, or volatile AAs)
Anti-shivering
Also a potent agonist at alpha2 receptors
* May also contribute to anti-shivering effect
* Clonidine is more effective in suppressing shivering
Comparison with morphine
- Oral absorption is better than morphine
But
- Not useful for treating diarrhoea or coughing
- Significant negative cardiac inotropic effect
* Unique among opioids
- Significant risk of histamine release
- Greater orthostatic hypotension than morphine
- Delirium and seizures
- Risk of serotonin syndrome
* Especially in patients receiving SSRIs or MAO inhibitors.
Other differences
Other differences between meperidine and morphine
- Rarely causes bradycardia
--> Tend to cause tachycardia (atropine-like effect)
- Less constipation and urinary retention
- Less biliary tract spasm
- Does NOT cause miosis
* Causes mydriasis instead (atropine-like effect)
- Withdrawal symptoms are milder, faster onset and shorter duration than morphine.
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
- Well absorbed from GIT
* Unlike moprhine
* But still only half as effective as administered IM
Distribution
- Vd = 305 L
- Vd = 3-5 L/kg
* [RDM6:p401]
- Protein-binding = 70%
Metabolism
- Extensive hepatic metabolism
- Hepatic extration ratio = 0.5 - 0.7
* [RDM6:p401]
- Pethidine (meperidine)
* Demethylation to norpethidine (normeperidine), OR
* Hydrolysis to pethidinic acid (meperidinic acid)
- Norpethidine
--> Hydrolysis to normeperidinic acid
Norpethidine
- Long elimination half-time = 15 hours (or <35 hours in renal failure)
* Can still be detected in urine after 3 days
- About 1/2the analgesic potency as pethidine
- About twice as potent as convulsive agent as pethidine
Toxicity of norpethidine (normeperidine)
- Myoclonus and seizures
- May also play a role in pethidine-induced delirium (confusion, hallucination)
- Most likely during prolonged administration (e.g. during PCA)
Elimination
- Urinary excretion of metabolites
- pH-dependent urinary excretion
* Acid urine increases urinary excretion
* pH < 5, 25% of pethidine excreted unchanged in urine
- Clearance = 8 - 18 mL/kg/min
Action profile
- Duration of action 2-4 hours
* Shorter than morphine
- Elimination half-time = 3-5 hours
Physicochemical properties
- Weak base
- pKa = 8.5
- At pH 7.4
--> 7% nonionised
- Lipid solubility = 32 times morphine
Special considerations
Elderly
Elderly
--> Lower plasma protein binding
--> Greater concentration of free meperidine
--> Increased effect
Alcoholics
Alcoholics
--> Increased Vd
--> Lower concentration of meperidine
--> Increased tolerance to meperidine and other opioids