Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE versus DURAGESIC 37.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE versus DURAGESIC 37.
BUTORPHANOL TARTRATE vs DURAGESIC-37
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.
Fentanyl binds to mu-opioid receptors, activating G-protein coupled receptor signaling, leading to inhibition of adenylate cyclase, decreased cAMP production, and modulation of ion channels (increased potassium efflux, decreased calcium influx). This results in reduced neuronal excitability, inhibition of nociceptive transmission, and altered pain perception. Additionally, fentanyl may interact with other opioid receptors (kappa, delta) with lower affinity.
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.
Initial: 25 mcg/hour transdermal patch applied every 72 hours. Titrate based on opioid tolerance. For opioid-naive patients: 12 mcg/hour patch.
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 20-27 hours (range 13-42 h) after transdermal removal; due to continuous absorption from skin depot, effective half-life is longer during patch wear.
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.
Primarily renal: 75% as metabolites (mostly norfentanyl) and <10% unchanged drug. Fecal: 9% via biliary elimination.
Category C
Category C
Opioid Analgesic
Opioid Analgesic