Methocarbamol
Methocarbamol
Generic Name
Methocarbamol
Mechanism
- Central nervous system (CNS) depressant – acts on brain‑stem reflex centers that regulate muscle tone, reducing alpha‑motor neuron excitability.
- Increases glycine transmission and potentiates GABA‑mediated chloride influx, ultimately dampening neuronal firing.
- It does not work directly on skeletal muscle or NMJ; all effects are centrally mediated.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Oral bioavailability ~25 %; peak serum concentrations in 1–4 h.
- Distribution: Widely distributed; protein binding ~50 %.
- Metabolism: Primarily hepatic via glucuronidation.
- Elimination: Renal excretion of unchanged drug and metabolites.
- Half‑life: 2–6 h in healthy adults; prolonged to ~3–7 h in elderly or hepatic dysfunction.
Indications
- *Reversible muscle spasm* associated with acute musculoskeletal injury (e.g., sprain, strain).
- Often combined with analgesics for spasm‑related pain management.
- Adjunct in multimodal pain protocols (e.g., spinal cord injuries, thoracic outlet syndrome).
Contraindications
- Allergy to methocarbamol or IPC (isopropyl carbamate) derivatives.
- Bacterial meningitis (due to potential CNS toxicity).
- Pregnancy category C – use only if benefits outweigh risks.
- Use caution in patients:
- Severe hepatic impairment
- Renal disease
- Elderly (increased CNS depression risk)
- Alcohol abuse or CNS depressants (additive sedation)
> Warning: May reverse neuroprotective effects of hypothermia; avoid in emergent hypothermic care.
Dosing
| Form | Adult Dose | Frequency | Special Populations |
| Oral | 500 mg every 6 h (maximum 2000 mg/day) | 3–4 ×/day | 10–70 kg children: 6.8 mg/kg bid; Admin note: Premedication with antihistamine may reduce infusion‑related flushing.
Adverse Effects
- Common: nausea, vomiting, dizziness, visual disturbances, mild sedation, hypotonia.
- Serious: respiratory depression (rare), severe CNS depression, hypotension, hepatic enzyme elevations, anaphylactoid reactions, skin rash.
- Drug interactions: additive CNS depression with alcohol, benzodiazepines, opioids, barbiturates.
Monitoring
- Observe for:
- CNS depression – respiratory rate, level of consciousness.
- Hepatic function – ALT/AST every 2–4 weeks during prolonged therapy.
- Renal function – BUN/Cr baseline, then quarterly.
- Signs of allergic reaction – rash, pruritus, hypotension.
- Consider urinary output if constipation or urinary retention is reported.
Clinical Pearls
- Peripheral edema can appear; advise patient to elevate legs if swelling develops.
- Drug cross‑reaction: Patients allergic to cyclobenzaprine may tolerate methocarbamol, except for shared metabolite‑based adverse effects.
- Taper strategy: Discontinue after 1–2 days; if extended use required, taper by 25 % every 3 days to mitigate rebound spasm.
- IV infusion: Rapid IV administration (within 30 s) can precipitate flushing; dilute and infuse over ≥5 min.
- Pregnancy & lactation: Cross placental barrier; minimal data – use only when essential.
- Age‑related sensitivity: Elderly patients may experience prolonged half‑life; begin at one‑third of standard dose if there are CNS risk factors.
Key Takeaway: Methocarbamol is a centrally acting, first‑line muscle relaxant for acute musculoskeletal spasm, best used short‑term, with meticulous dose adjustment for special populations and vigilance for CNS depression and hepatic dysfunction.