Ketorolac Tromethamine
Ketorolac tromethamine
Generic Name
Ketorolac tromethamine
Mechanism
Ketorolac tromethamine is a potent, short‑acting non‑steroidal anti‑inflammatory drug (NSAID) that exerts its effect primarily by selective inhibition of cyclo‑oxygenase‑1 (COX‑1) and COX‑2, thereby suppressing the synthesis of prostaglandins responsible for pain, fever, and inflammation.
• Rapid oral absorption and peak plasma concentration (1–3 h).
• Metabolized by conjugation and excretion via the kidneys.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Oral: > 90 % bioavailability, peak at 1–3 h; IM/IV: immediate systemic availability.
- Distribution: 92‑95 % protein bound (predominantly albumin).
- Metabolism: Conjugation in the liver (glucuronidation).
- Elimination: Renal clearance; half‑life 5–7 h (oral), 4–5 h (IV).
- Special populations: Dose reductions recommended in renal impairment (CrCl < 30 mL/min); use with caution in hepatic disease.
Indications
- Moderate to severe acute pain (post‑operative, dental, musculoskeletal).
- Pre‑operative analgesia up to 24 h prior to surgery.
- Not indicated for chronic pain management due to GI, renal, and bleeding risks.
Contraindications
- Absolute contraindications:
- History of hypersensitivity to NSAIDs or aspirin.
- Active peptic ulcer disease, GI bleeding, or severe gastritis.
- Severe renal impairment (CrCl 65 y with comorbidities.
- Warnings:
- Monitor for GI ulceration, renal dysfunction, and bleeding.
- Avoid prolonged use (>5 days).
Dosing
| Route | Initial Dose | Max Daily Dose | Duration of Use |
| Oral | 15 mg q8h (max 40 mg/day) | 40 mg/day | ≤ 5 days |
| IV/IM | 30 mg q6h (max 120 mg/day) | 120 mg/day | ≤ 3 days |
• Special instructions:
• Administer with food or milk to reduce GI irritation.
• Use a rescue dosing strategy for breakthrough pain.
• Consider alternative analgesics (opioids, paracetamol) if higher analgesic need persists.
Adverse Effects
- Common (≥ 1 %):
- Dysphagia, nausea, dyspepsia, dizziness, headache.
- Serious (≥ 0.1 %):
- Peptic ulcer, GI bleeding, renal tubular acidosis, anaphylaxis, hepatic injury, severe hypersensitivity reactions.
- Thromboembolic events (especially in patients with cardiovascular history).
Monitoring
- Clinical: Pain score, sedation level, renal function status.
- Laboratory:
- Serum creatinine and eGFR baseline, then every 48 h for > 30 days.
- Liver enzymes (AST/ALT) if therapy > 3 days.
- Other: Monitor for signs of GI bleeding (hematemesis, melena) and bleeding after minor procedures.
Clinical Pearls
- Short‑term, high‑dose use gives powerful analgesia but limits to 5 days to prevent GI/renal sequelae.
- Use with caution in geriatric patients; baseline renal function assessment essential.
- Switch to acetaminophen (paracetamol) once ketorolac therapy ends to maintain analgesia without overlapping NSAID toxicity.
- Avoid concomitant aspirin unless therapeutic benefit outweighs bleeding risk – ketorolac markedly enhances aspirin’s bleeding effect.
- In patients on anticoagulants, ketorolac can potentiate bleeding; consider alternative analgesics or temporary discontinuation.
- Pregnancy counseling: ketorolac should be avoided after 32 weeks gestation, as it may cause premature closure of the ductus arteriosus.
*Always consult the most recent prescribing information and institutional protocols before prescribing.*