Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE versus DURAGESIC 100.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE versus DURAGESIC 100.
BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE vs DURAGESIC-100
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
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.
Pure opioid agonist that binds to mu-opioid receptors in the CNS, mimicking endogenous endorphins to inhibit pain transmission. Also interacts with kappa and delta receptors. Therapeutic effects include analgesia, sedation, and euphoria.
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.
Transdermal patch; initial dose based on prior opioid use: for opioid-naive patients, 12 mcg/h every 72 hours; for opioid-tolerant patients, convert using equianalgesic tables; maximum dose 100 mcg/h per patch; apply to non-irritated, non-irradiated skin on chest, back, flank, or upper arm.
None Documented
None Documented
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).
Terminal elimination half-life approximately 20–27 hours after transdermal system removal (range 13–25 hours in healthy adults; prolonged in elderly, hepatic impairment, and cachexia).
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.
Renal (primarily as metabolites, <10% unchanged fentanyl); fecal (about 9% of dose).
Category C
Category C
Opioid Analgesic
Opioid Analgesic