Visceral pain related to smooth muscle spasm is one of the most common symptoms observed in many gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) disorders.
Patients with pain VAS ≥ 7 experienced better pain relief with the mixture as compared to patients with baseline pain VAS score < 7, no matter the pain origin nor the subjacent cause of pain. Further studies with a greater sample size and specific visceral pain conditions could clarify better use of the mixtures of NSAIDs and spasmolitics in specific visceral pain conditions.
Visceral pain related to smooth muscle spasm is one of the most common symptoms observed in many gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) disorders. Though the cause of visceral pain is not fully known, the symptomatic treatment of abdominal cramping pain and biliary and renal colic may include the use of spasmolytic agents or NSAIDs. Spasmolytic agents are used due to their smooth muscle relaxing effect and NSAIDs due to their known clinical effectiveness in biliary and renal colic conditions. Mixtures of NSAIDs and spasmolytic agents such as dypirone, lysine clonixinate or ibuprofen plus hyoscine butylbromide are used in some countries for the symptomatic treatment of abdominal pain associated with cramping. The theoretical rational basis for using these mixtures in several visceral pain conditions arise from the participation of a spastic process of smooth muscle in the affected viscera, plus the potential participation of prostaglandins through visceral pain hypersensitivity.
Rationale behind research
Objective
To characterize the analgesic effect and safety of ketorolac and hyoscine butylbromide against hyoscine butylbromide alone in patients with ambulatory acute cramping pain of gastrointestinal and genitourinary origin.
Study outcomes
Time points
Baseline: Treatment groups were well balanced with no significant baseline differences.
Outcomes
Overall, in patients with a pain VAS ≥ 7, better pain relief was observed with the mixture, in comparison with those patients whose baseline pain VAS score was < 7, no matter the pain origin nor the subjacent cause of pain. This could be an important finding, since further studies with a greater sample size and specific visceral pain conditions could clarify therapeutic potential of NSAIDs in other indications of visceral pain such as colitis and irritable bowel syndrome, according with the intensity of pain, and better use of mixtures of NSAIDs and spasmolitics in specific visceral pain conditions.
NA
This was the first report about an improved effect of the oral mixture of an NSAID, as ketorolac, with a spasmolytic agent, as hyoscine butylbromide, in comparison to hyoscine butylbromide alone and findings suggest a main role of prostaglandins in high intensity visceral pain and it could explain why improved effect of ketorolac/hyoscine butylbromide mixture is only seen in intense but not mild visceral pain.
Arzneimittelforschung 2012; 62: 603–608
Ketorolac tromethamine improves the analgesic effect of hyoscine butylbromide in patients with intense cramping pain from gastrointestinal or genitourinary origin.
del Valle-Laisequilla CF et al.
Comments (0)