Paracetamol Flashcards
1
Q
Outline the theorized mechanisms of action of paracetamol
A
Mechanism for Analgesic effects of paracetamol:
- Poorly understood
- Mechanism 1: modifies cyclo-oyxgenase (COX) system WITHOUT affecting the inflammatory cascade -> inhibits peroxidase function of COX
- Mechanism 2: activates descending analgesic pathway of the CNS
1) Relies on NT of descending analgesic pathway (i.e. serotonin, enkephalin, cannabinoid)
2) Paracetamol effect reduced when these NT are inhibited - Acts on all levels of pain stimulus
2
Q
Outline the uses for paracetamol use in dentistry
A
- First choice analgesic
- For mild to moderate pain
- Recommended dosage = 4g/day: Acts by depleting glutathione stores in liver
- Fast onset (<1hr)
- Short action (4-6 hours)
3
Q
Identify the maximum recommended dosage of paracetamol
A
- Maximum dosage: 4g per 24 hour
- Paracetamol has a narrow therapeutic index
4
Q
Describe pathology of over dosage of paracetamol
A
- Metabolized in liver and excreted in urine
- Toxic metabolites as intermediate product (NAPQI)
- Risk in patients with liver or kidney disease
- Removal of parcetamol:
1) 90% metabolized by liver to inactive metabolites (conjugation) - sulphation: Conjugation with glucuronic acid, sulfuric acid, or cystine
2) 5% eliminated unchanged by kidneys
3) 5% metabolized by liver through toxic pathway to inactive metabolites (conjugation): cytochrome P450 enzyme converts Paracetamol to NAPQI (Toxic metabolite), NAPQI is inactivated by glutathione - Overdose is accumulation of NAPQI
- Factors affecting toxicity:
1) Increase Toxicity: CYP450 induction (Rifampicin, barbiturates and carbamazepine), Glutathione depletion (e.g. Liver disease)
2) Decrease toxicity: CYP450 Inhibition, enhanced sulphation (of Paracetamol) - NAPQI binds to liver macromolecules -> liver cell death
- Treatment: Minor over-dose: N-acetyl cysteine; Major overdose: liver transplantation