Among five oral analgesics used for treating acute musculoskeletal extremity pain in the emergency department, none appears superior to others in terms of relieving pain 1 hour after administration, according to a study. However, more patients treated with opioids experience nausea and vomiting.
The study randomized 600 patients to receive one of the following: 400 mg ibuprofen/1,000 mg acetaminophen, 800 mg ibuprofen/1,000 mg acetaminophen, 30 mg codeine/300 mg acetaminophen, 5 mg hydrocodone/300 mg acetaminophen, or 5 mg oxycodone/325 mg acetaminophen.
The primary outcome of change in pain from baseline to 60 minutes after treatment did not differ by treatment (p=0.69).
Mean changes in pain in numeric rating scale units (ranging from 0 or “no pain” to 10 or “worst imaginable pain”) were 3.0 with 400-mg ibuprofen/1,000-mg acetaminophen, 3.0 with 800-mg ibuprofen/1,000-mg acetaminophen, 3.4 with 30-mg codeine/300-mg acetaminophen, 3.1 with 5-mg hydrocodone/300-mg acetaminophen, and 3.3 with 5-mg oxycodone/325-mg acetaminophen.
Rescue medication was given within 1 hour of analgesic administration in two patients on 400-mg ibuprofen/1,000-mg acetaminophen (1.7 percent), three on 800-mg ibuprofen/1,000-mg acetaminophen (2.5 percent), none of those on 30-mg codeine/300-mg acetaminophen (0.0 percent), three on 5-mg hydrocodone/300-mg acetaminophen (2.5 percent), and none on 5-mg oxycodone/325-mg acetaminophen (0.0 percent; p=0.21).
Nausea or vomiting occurred with greater frequency among patients who received opioids versus other painkillers (6.7 percent versus 1.7 percent). The findings at 2 hours were similar.