MBE: AINE IM vs VO: diferència entre les revisions
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In renal colic there is evidence that NSAIDs actquickest when given intravenously. This may be clinically relevant. | In renal colic there is evidence that NSAIDs actquickest when given intravenously. This may be clinically relevant. | ||
In all other pain conditions there is a lack of evidence of any difference between routes. | In all other pain conditions there is a lack of evidence of any difference between routes. | ||
In pain conditions other than renal colic, there is, therefore, a strong argument to give oral NSAIDs when patients can swallow <cite>TD5</cite>. La mateixa que en el TripDatabase. | In pain conditions other than renal colic, there is, therefore, a strong argument to give oral NSAIDs when patients can swallow <cite>TD5</cite>. | ||
La mateixa que en el TripDatabase. | |||
*OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical efficacy of single doses of intramuscular ketorolac and oral ibuprofen in the emergency department (ED) treatment of acute pain. | |||
*DESIGN: A retrospective analysis of data collected during a prospective survey of pain management efficacy. The design was noninterventional, and therapy was selected by the treating physician independent of the trial. | |||
*SETTING: Urban teaching hospital adult patient emergency department. | |||
*PARTICIPANTS: A convenience sample of ED patients in acute pain. | |||
*INTERVENTIONS: Patients received ibuprofen 800 mg po (n = 95), or ketorolac 60 mg im (n = 30) as a single dose. Therapy was selected by the treating physician and was not influenced by the study. | |||
*RESULTS: Data collected were a 100-mm visual analog pain scale at patient arrival and discharge, verbal description of pain relief, patient demographics, pain management data, and discharge diagnosis. Baseline pain intensity was higher in patients receiving ketorolac (77 mm median) than in those receiving ibuprofen (65 mm, p = 0.02). Pain relief was similar (p = 0.29) with either treatment when assessed by visual analog scale or patient definition of pain relief. CONCLUSIONS: A single dose of either nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug produced similar pain relief in the general ED population during clinical treatment of pain. Ketorolac should not necessarily be considered a more effective analgesic than ibuprofen in these commonly used doses. | |||
==[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/ PubMed]== | ==[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/ PubMed]== |