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Methoxyflurane (Penthrox®)—a case series of use in the prehospital setting

02 February 2019
Volume 11 · Issue 2

Abstract

Methoxyflurane (Penthrox®) is a fluorinated hydrocarbon, which when first used in general anaesthesia was noted to have strong analgesic properties in subanaesthetic dosage. More than 5 million doses have been sold for use in Australia since 1978 and have been found to have an excellent safety profile. After rigorous review by the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency, methoxyflurane was granted a product licence in 2015 in the UK and Europe for the relief of pain in patients with moderate-to-severe trauma. This paper presents the first reported case series of patients treated with methoxyflurane in the UK and Ireland in the prehospital environment. The results show a statistically significant improvement in patient pain scores at 1, 2 and 5 minutes following administration of methoxyflurane. With its use increasing in prehospital care and emergency departments, methoxyflurane is recognised as a useful adjunct to the choice of analgesia for trauma patients with moderate-to-severe pain.

Despite advances in pain medication and widely accepted guidelines for the treatment of pain, such as the World Health Organization (WHO) analgesic ladder (Ventafridda et al, 1985), inadequate assessment and management of acute pain remains common in prehospital and emergency department (ED) settings (Guéant et al, 2011; Dale et al, 2015; Pierik et al, 2015). Poor or slow pain management practices can have a negative impact on patient care, patient-reported outcomes and patient flow (Thomas, 2013).

Methoxyflurane belongs to the fluorinated hydrocarbon group of volatile anaesthetics (Tomlin et al, 1965). As with all anaesthetics, the precise mechanism of action is unclear. Methoxyflurane is unique in this anaesthetic family in having well-documented analgesic properties at low doses (Blair et al, 2016; Jephcott et al, 2018).

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