Oral Diclofenac Potassium Versus Intravenous Acetaminophen in Acute, Isolated, Closed-Limb Trauma.

Emergency Medicine Research Center, Shariati Hospital (Drs Momeni, Vahidi, and Saeedi), Emergency Medicine Department (Drs Momeni, Vahidi, Badrizadeh, and Saeedi), and Internal Medicine Department (Dr Naderpour), Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

Advanced emergency nursing journal. 2019;(1):48-55

Abstract

Pain control is an important concern in limb trauma. The most ideal agent for this purpose varies among different hospitals. The objective of this study was to compare the analgesic effect of oral diclofenac potassium versus intravenous acetaminophen in patients with limb trauma. This was a double-blind randomized clinical trial conducted on 60 adult patients. Oral diclofenac potassium (50 mg) was given in Group D, and intravenous acetaminophen (1 g in 500 ml normal saline over 20 min) was administered in Group A. Patients' pain scores (visual analogue scale) were recorded and compared at baseline, 5, 15, 30, 60 min, and 4 hr after drug administration. The mean age was 42.62 ± 15.42 and 38.04 ± 17.48 years in Group A and Group D, respectively. No significant change was observed between the 2 groups (p = 0.11). In this study, both drugs could decrease the pain score effectively and safely in isolated limb trauma.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Randomized Controlled Trial

Metadata