Analgesia after operation: A controlled comparison of meptazinol, pentazocine and pethidine

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Abstract

In a double-blind investigation of the efficacy on pain following abdominal or orthopaedic surgery, meptazinol 100 mg, a new hexahydroazepine derivative, was found to be equiporent with pentazo-cine 60 mg and pethidine 100 mg when given i.m. Analgesia was maximal 30-60 min after injection and was still present at the end of 2 h. The duration of action of meptazinol was estimated to be 4 h. Meptazinol produced less sedation and a greater sparing of lung function tests than did pethidine and pentazocine. When meptazinol or morphine was administered for further pain relief in a single-blind manner there was no evidence of patient preference for one drug or the other. © 1977 Copyright: Macmillan Journals Ltd.

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APA

Paymaster, N. J. (1977). Analgesia after operation: A controlled comparison of meptazinol, pentazocine and pethidine. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 49(11), 1139–1146. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/49.11.1139

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