Therapeutic Classification: antianxiety agents, anticonvulsants, sedative/hypnotics, skeletal muscle relaxants (centrally acting)
Pharmacologic Classification: benzodiazepines
BEERS REMS
Absorption: Rapidly absorbed from the GI tract. Absorption from IM sites may be slow and unpredictable. Well absorbed from rectal mucosa (90%) and nasal mucosa (97%). IV administration results in complete bioavailability.
Distribution: Widely distributed. Crosses the blood-brain barrier.
Half-Life: Neonates: 5095 hr; Infants (1 mo2 yr): 4050 hr; Children 212 yr: 1521 hr; Children 1216 yr: 1820 hr; Adults: 2050 hr (up to 100 hr for metabolites).
(sedation)
| ROUTE | ONSET | PEAK | DURATION |
|---|---|---|---|
| PO | 3060 min | 12 hr | up to 24 hr |
| IM | within 20 min | 0.51.5 hr | unknown |
| IV | 15 min | 1530 min | 1560 min‡ |
| Rectal | 210 min | 12 hr | 412 hr |
‡In status epilepticus, anticonvulsant duration is 1520 min.
Contraindicated in:
Use Cautiously in:
CV: hypotension(IV)
Derm: rash
EENT: ↑intraocular pressure, blurred vision, epistaxis(nasal spray), nasal congestion (nasal spray), nasal discomfort (nasal spray)
GI: constipation, diarrhea(may be caused by propylene glycol content in oral solution), nausea, vomiting
Local: pain (IM), phlebitis(IV)
Neuro: dizziness, drowsiness, lethargy, ataxia, depression, dysgeusia (nasal spray), hangover, headache, paradoxical excitation, slurred speech
Resp: RESPIRATORY DEPRESSION
Misc: physical dependence, psychological dependence, tolerance
Drug-drug:
Use with opioids or other CNS depressants, including other benzodiazepines, nonbenzodiazepine sedative/hypnotics, anxiolytics, general anesthetics, muscle relaxants, antipsychotics, and alcohol, may cause profound sedation, respiratory depression, coma, and death; reserve concurrent use for when alternative treatment options are inadequate.
Drug-Natural Products:

Anxiety
Pre-Endoscopy
Pediatric Conscious Sedation for Procedures
Status Epilepticus/Acute Seizure Activity
Febrile Seizure Prophylaxis
Skeletal Muscle Relaxation
Alcohol Withdrawal
Assess risk for addiction, abuse, or misuse prior to administration. Prolonged high-dose therapy may lead to psychological or physical dependence. Restrict amount of drug available to patient. Observe depressed patients closely for suicidal tendencies.
Lab Test Considerations:
Toxicity and Overdose:
Use lowest effective dose. Taper by 2 mg every 3 days to ↓ withdrawal symptoms. Some patients may require longer taper periods.
IV Administration:
IV diazepam is a vesicant. Administer into a large vein. If extravasation occurs, immediately stop infusion. Leave needle/cannula in place temporarily but do not flush the line. Gently aspirate extravasated solution; then remove needle/cannula. Elevate patient's extremity and apply dry cold or warm compresses.
Caution patient not to stop taking diazepam without consulting health care provider. Abrupt withdrawal may cause sweating, vomiting, muscle cramps, tremors, and seizures; may be life-threatening.
Advise patient that diazepam is a drug with known abuse potential. Protect it from theft, and never give to anyone other than the individual for whom it was prescribed. Store out of sight and reach of children and in a location not accessible by others.
Advise patient to avoid the use of alcohol or other CNS depressants, including opioids, concurrently with diazepam; may cause respiratory depression and overdose.