Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: OXAYDO versus ULTIVA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: OXAYDO versus ULTIVA.
OXAYDO vs ULTIVA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Oxycodone is a full opioid agonist with relative selectivity for mu-opioid receptors, although it can bind to kappa-opioid receptors at higher doses. The principal therapeutic action of oxycodone is analgesia. Like all full opioid agonists, there is no ceiling effect to analgesia for oxycodone.
Selective mu-opioid receptor agonist with rapid onset and short duration of action; produces analgesia without significant histamine release.
Oral, 5-10 mg every 4-6 hours as needed for pain; maximum 60 mg per day.
IV bolus: 1 mcg/kg over 30-60 seconds, then continuous IV infusion: 0.25-1 mcg/kg/min for intraoperative analgesia. For general anesthesia induction: 0.5-1 mcg/kg IV bolus; maintenance: 0.25-1 mcg/kg/min IV infusion.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is 3.5-5.5 hours for immediate-release oxycodone; clinically dose every 4-6 hours for sustained analgesia.
Terminal elimination half-life is 3-10 minutes (context-sensitive half-time is 3-4 minutes independent of infusion duration due to rapid ester hydrolysis). Clinically, recovery is rapid and predictable even after prolonged infusions, with full recovery within 5-10 minutes of discontinuation.
Primarily renal as unchanged drug and metabolites; ~90% excreted in urine (approx 10% unchanged oxycodone, rest as noroxycodone and oxymorphone conjugates) and <10% in feces via biliary elimination.
Remifentanil is metabolized by non-specific blood and tissue esterases to a virtually inactive metabolite (remifentanil acid, 1/4600 potency). Renal excretion accounts for approximately 90% of the metabolite; fecal elimination is minimal (<5%).
Category C
Category C
Opioid Analgesic
Opioid Analgesic