prochlorperazine การใช้
- Prochlorperazine and desferrioxamine may also interact with chlorpromazine to produce transient metabolic encephalopathy.
- Commonly used anti-emetics include ondansetron, metoclopramide, prochlorperazine, and promethazine.
- Prochlorperazine is another commonly prescribed medication to help alleviate the symptoms of vertigo and nausea.
- Prochlorperazine can also cause a life-threatening condition called neuroleptic malignant syndrome ( NMS ).
- For example, metoclopramide and prochlorperazine, although widely used for nausea, are ineffective for motion-sickness prevention and treatment.
- Prochlorperazine is analogous to chlorpromazine, both of these agents antagonize dopaminergic D 2 receptors in various pathways of the central nervous system.
- Studies have shown that older adults with dementia who take antipsychotics ( medications for mental illness ) such as prochlorperazine have an increased chance of death during treatment.
- Prochlorperazine ( Compazine, Buccastem, Stemetil ) and Pimozide ( Orap ) are less commonly used to treat psychotic states, and so are sometimes excluded from this classification.
- Smythies J, Edelstein L . ( 2014 ) The desferrioxamine-prochlorperazine coma clue to the role of dopamine-iron recycling in the synthesis of hydrogen peroxide in the brain.
- Agents that interfere with the renal cation exchange system, such as verapamil, cimetidine, hydrochlorothiazide, itraconazole, ketoconazole, prochlorperazine, and trimethoprim should not be administered to individuals taking dofetilide.
- Treatment, in the case of acute labyrinthitis ( inner ear disorder ), should be given within 10 days of the onset of symptoms and prochlorperazine, a vestibular sedative, may be administered for vertigo.
- As of May 2014, buccal forms of the psychiatric drug, asenapine; the opioid drugs buprenorphine, naloxone, and fentanyl; the cardiovascular drug nitroglycerin; the nausea medication Prochlorperazine; the hormone replacement therapy testosterone, and nicotine as a smoking cessation aid, were commercially available in buccal forms,