Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ALFENTA versus BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ALFENTA versus BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE.
ALFENTA vs BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
μ-opioid receptor agonist that activates G-protein coupled receptors to inhibit adenylate cyclase, decreasing cAMP production, leading to reduced neuronal excitability and pain transmission.
Butorphanol tartrate is a mixed agonist-antagonist opioid analgesic that exerts its effects primarily through partial agonism at the mu-opioid receptor and full agonism at the kappa-opioid receptor. This results in analgesia with a ceiling effect for respiratory depression. It also has weak antagonistic activity at the mu receptor.
Intravenous: Initial dose 8-20 mcg/kg (0.5-1 min) then 0.5-3 mcg/kg/min or 3-5 mcg/kg q5-20min. For short procedures: 8-20 mcg/kg. For longer procedures: 50-75 mcg/kg followed by 0.5-3 mcg/kg/min.
1-2 mg intravenously or intramuscularly every 3-4 hours as needed; alternatively, 1-2 mg intranasally as a single dose (for migraine, may repeat after 60 minutes). For patient-controlled analgesia (PCA): 0.5-1 mg intravenous bolus with lockout interval of 10-15 minutes. Epidural: 0.5-2 mg as a single dose.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateAlfentanil + Torasemide
"The risk or severity of adverse effects can be increased when Alfentanil is combined with Torasemide."
Clinical Note
moderateAlfentanil + Etacrynic acid
"The risk or severity of adverse effects can be increased when Alfentanil is combined with Etacrynic acid."
Clinical Note
moderateAlfentanil + Furosemide
"The risk or severity of adverse effects can be increased when Alfentanil is combined with Furosemide."
Clinical Note
moderateAlfentanil + Bumetanide
Terminal elimination half-life: 90–111 minutes (1.5–1.85 hours); prolonged in hepatic impairment.
Terminal elimination half-life is 2.5-3.5 hours (mean ~3 hours) in adults; prolonged in hepatic impairment (up to 5-6 hours) and renal impairment (variable, may increase).
Primarily renal (urinary) elimination as metabolites; approximately 80% recovered in urine, 20% in feces.
Primarily hepatic metabolism to inactive metabolites; renal excretion accounts for approximately 70-80% of elimination (mostly metabolites), with 15-20% via feces (biliary). Less than 5% excreted unchanged in urine.
Category C
Category C
Opioid Analgesic
Opioid Analgesic
"The risk or severity of adverse effects can be increased when Alfentanil is combined with Bumetanide."