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Analgesic effect of fentiazac after tooth extraction or minor oral surgery.

作者信息

Shimura K, Oto A, Hanai Y, Watanabe S, Toda M, Asada K, Ishibashi K, Shimabukuro Y, Yokochi N, Shiramizu H, Fuse T, Saeki T, Hayakawa T

出版信息

Clin Ther. 1981;4(1):12-7.

PMID:6974045
Abstract

A new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, fentiazac, was used for analgesia after tooth extractions and minor oral surgery in two Japanese dental hospitals. The drug was administered as a single oral dose of either 50 mg or 100 mg. The 50-mg dose provided rapid analgesic effect, but its effect lasted only two to three hours in a number of patients. At a dose of 100 mg, fentiazac proved effective for 85% of 53 patients, usually providing marked reduction of disappearance of pain within one hour or less. Among patients in whom pain reappeared, the mean time for recurrence was four hours, indicating a satisfactory duration of analgesic effect. One side effect--loss of appetite--was reported by one patient in the entire series of 71 subjects. It is concluded that fentiazac is a highly effective analgesic agent with a wide margin of safety for use after dental procedures that produce pain.

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