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Meperidine

Catalog No. DB00454 Name DrugBank
CAS Number 57-42-1 Website http://www.ualberta.ca/
M. F. C15H21NO2 Telephone (780) 492-3111
M. W. 247.33274 Fax (780) 492-1071
Purity Email david.wishart@ualberta.ca
Storage Chembase ID: 337

SYNONYMS

IUPAC name
ethyl 1-methyl-4-phenylpiperidine-4-carboxylate
IUPAC Traditional name
meperidine
Brand Name
Methyl phenylpiperidine carbonic acid ethyl ester
Demerol
Dolosal
Operidine
Pethidineter
Dispadol
Centralgin
Dolcontral
Dolsin
Isonipecaine
Lidol
Meperidine Hcl
Petantin
Pethidin
Pethidine
Petydyna
Piperosal
Demarol
Dolantin
Lydol
Meperidol
Nemerol
Pethanol
Phetidine
Pipersal
Piridosal

DATABASE IDS

CAS Number 57-42-1
PubChem SID 46506899
PubChem CID 4058

PROPERTIES

Hydrophobicity(logP) 2.6
Solubility 3220 mg/L

DETAILS

Description (English)
Item Information
Drug Groups approved
Description A narcotic analgesic that can be used for the relief of most types of moderate to severe pain, including postoperative pain and the pain of labor. Prolonged use may lead to dependence of the morphine type; withdrawal symptoms appear more rapidly than with morphine and are of shorter duration. [PubChem]
Indication Used to control moderate to severe pain.
Pharmacology Meperidine is a synthetic opiate agonist belonging to the phenylpiperidine class. Meperidine may produce less smooth muscle spasm, constipation, and depression of the cough reflex than equivalent doses of morphine. The onset of action is lightly more rapid than with morphine, and the duration of action is slightly shorter. The chemical structure of meperidine is similar to local anesthetics. Meperidine is recommended for relief of moderate to severe acute pain and has the unique ability to interrupt postoperative shivering and shaking chills induced by amphotericin B. Meperidine has also been used for intravenous regional anesthesia, peripheral nerve blocks and intraarticular, epidural and spinal analgesia. Meperidine is considered a second-line agent for the treatment of acute pain.
Affected Organisms
Humans and other mammals
Biotransformation Meperidine is metabolized in the liver by hydrolysis to meperidinic acid followed by partial conjugation with glucuronic acid. Meperidine also undergoes N-demethylation to normeperidine, which then undergoes hydrolysis and partial conjugation. Normeperidine is about half as potent as meperidine, but it has twice the CNS stimulation effects.
Absorption The oral bioavailability of meperidine in patients with normal hepatic function is 50-60% due to extensive first-pass metabolism. Bioavailability increases to 80-90% in patients with hepatic impairment (e.g. liver cirrhosis). Meperidine is less than half as effective when administered orally compared to parenteral administration. One study reported that 80-85% of the drug administered intramuscularly was absorbed within 6 hours of intragluteal injection in health adults; however, inter-individual variation and patient-specific variable appear to cause considerable variations in absorption upon IM injection.
Half Life Initial distribution phase (t1/2 α) = 2-11 minutes; terminal elimination phase (t1/2 β) = 3-5 hours. In patients with hepatic dysfunction (e.g. liver cirrhosis or active viral hepatitis) the t1/2 β is prolonged to 7-11 hours.
Protein Binding 60-80% bound to plasma proteins, primarily albumin and α1-acid glycoprotein. The presence of cirrhosis or active viral hepatitis does not appear to affect the extent of protein binding.
Elimination Excreted in the urine. The proportion of drug that is excreted unchanged or as metabolites is dependent on pH. When urine pH is uncontrolled, 5-30% of the meperidine dose is excreted as normeperidine and approximately 5% is excreted unchanged. Meperidine and normeperidine are found in acidic urine, while the free and conjugated forms of meperidinic and normperidinic acids are found in alkaline urine.
Distribution Meperidine crosses the placenta and is distributed into breast milk.
External Links
Wikipedia
RxList
Drugs.com

REFERENCES