Propoxyphene
[SH4:p116; NPS July 2003 PPR 22]
Usage
- Mild to moderate pain not adequately relieved by aspirin
* The only clinical usage
* Used in some popular pain-relievers such as di-gesic, capadex
Structure
- Structurally similar to methadone
Pharmacodynamics
Mechanism of action
- Binds to classic opioid receptors
Effects
- Does not have antipyretic or antiinflammatory effects
- No significant antitussive activity
- Analgesia
* Oral doses 90-120mg produces analgesia and CNS effects like codeine 60mg + aspirin 650mg
Side-effects
- Most common side effects
* Vertigo
* Sedation
* N&V
- Respiratory depression
* 1/3 as potent as codeine in depressing ventilation
- Overdose
--> Seizures and ventilation depression
- Mild withdrawal syndrome possible
- Similar abuse potential as codeine
- IV administration produce severe damage to veins
- Dependency possible
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
- Completely absorbed from oral administration
* But still poor bioavailability due to high first-pass hepatic metabolism
Metabolism
- High first-pass hepatic metabolism
- Propoxyphene is demethylated to norpropoxyphene
Elimination
- Elimination half-time = 14.5 hours
Clinical
Avoid paracetamol/dextropropoxyphene combinations (e.g. capadex, Di-Gesic, Paradex)
--> No more effective than paracetamol alone
* [NPS]