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Information

Pharmacologic Profile

General Use

Used to control mild to moderate pain and/or fever. Phenazopyridine is used only to treat urinary tract pain, and capsaicin is used topically for a variety of painful syndromes.

General Action and Information

Most nonopioid analgesics inhibit prostaglandin synthesis peripherally for analgesic effect and centrally for antipyretic effect.

Contraindications

Hypersensitivity and cross-sensitivity among NSAIDs may occur.

Precautions

Use cautiously in patients with severe hepatic or renal disease, chronic alcohol use/abuse, or malnutrition.

Interactions

Long-term use of acetaminophen with NSAIDs may the risk of adverse renal effects. Prolonged high-dose acetaminophen may the risk of bleeding with warfarin. Hepatotoxicity may be additive with other hepatotoxic agents, including alcohol. NSAIDs the risk of bleeding with warfarin, thrombolytic agents, antiplatelet agents, some cephalosporins, and valproate (effect is greatest with aspirin). NSAIDs may also the effectiveness of diuretics and antihypertensives.

Nursing Implications

Assessment

Potential Nursing Diagnoses

Implementation

Patient/Family Teaching

Evaluation/Desired Outcomes


Nonopioid Analgesics included in Davis's Drug Guide for Nurses