Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther
March 1995
The effects of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac and the pyrazolone derivative dipyrone on renal function were compared with those of placebo in 12 healthy male volunteers in a randomized, controlled, triple-crossover study with a wash-out period of 4 days between each of the 3 trial periods (dipyrone, diclofenac and placebo) which lasted three days each. The volunteers received dipyrone (1 g, 3 times/day for 2 days, followed by twice 1 g on the main trial day, which was day 3 of each study period) or diclofenac (50 mg, 3 times/day for 2 days, followed by twice 50 mg on the main trial day) or placebo orally. Standardized meals (50 mEq sodium per day) were given from one week before the start until the end of the study and on the main trial days a protein-rich lunch (2 g protein/kg body weight) was taken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo hundred and sixty patients with lumbago or sciatic pain participated in a multicenter observer-blind randomized trial to compare the efficacy and tolerability of dipyrone 2.5 g, diclofenac 75 mg, and placebo administered as an intramuscular injection once daily for the duration of one to two days. The effectiveness of the test treatments in relieving sciatic pain was measured by a visual analog scale (VAS) before and 30 minutes, 1, 2, 3, 6 and 24 hours after each injection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo investigate the combined analgesic and spasmolytic effect of dipyrone, 104 patients suffering from "severe" or "excruciating" colic pain due to a confirmed calculus in the upper urinary tract were randomized to receive i.v. either 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArzneimittelforschung
November 1993
To investigate the combined analgesic and spasmolytic effect of metamizole (dipyrone, Novalgin, CAS 68-89-3) this drug was compared with an opioid analgesic (tramadol) and a pure spasmolytic drug (butylscopolamine). In a multicentre, observer-blind, parallel-group study conducted in five German centres 74 patients suffering from "severe" or "excruciating" colic pain caused by a calculus in the bile duct were randomized to receive intravenously 2.5 g metamizole (25 patients), 100 mg tramadol (25 patients), or 20 mg butylscopolamine (24 patients).
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