Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics
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Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. · Nov 1994
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialCaffeine as an analgesic adjuvant in tension headache.
Six randomized, double-blind, two-period crossover studies, conducted under similar protocols, compared the efficacy of two analgesic combinations containing caffeine with an acetaminophen 1000 mg control and with a placebo in outpatients with episodic tension-type headaches. In four studies, comprising 1900 patients, the caffeine-containing analgesic consisted of a combination of 500 mg acetaminophen, 500 mg aspirin, and 130 mg caffeine (APAP/ASA/CAF). In two studies, comprising 911 patients, the caffeine-containing analgesic consisted of a combination of 1000 mg acetaminophen and 130 mg caffeine (APAP/CAF). ⋯ The significant analgesic adjuvant effect of caffeine was independent of patients' usual caffeine use or their caffeine consumption in the 4 hours before medication. For each treatment, the pooled analgesic responses for the four studies of APAP/ASA/CAF were virtually superimposable on the responses in the two APAP/CAF studies. The combinations produced more stomach discomfort, nervousness, and dizziness than acetaminophen or placebo.
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Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. · Nov 1994
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialThe pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (Digit Symbol Substitution Test) relationship of flumazenil in a midazolam steady-state model in healthy volunteers.
To characterize the plasma concentration-effect relationship of flumazenil in the presence of a predefined midazolam level, a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized two-way crossover study was conducted in nine healthy male subjects. After reaching a criterion level of midazolam-induced depression of the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST), volunteers received a dose of flumazenil (1.0 mg) or placebo over 1 minute, with the infusion of midazolam continued. ⋯ Flumazenil exhibited a rapid onset (the half-life of equilibration between drug concentration in the blood and drug effect was 3.3 minutes) and short duration of action (the flumazenil plasma concentration causing half-maximal effect was 7.4 ng/ml, which was reached about 1 hour after dosing). The results of this study also show the competitive nature of flumazenil as a midazolam antagonist.