This guide provides a structured, decision-oriented approach to the use of analgesics across common categories: Acetaminophen, NSAIDs, Opioids, Antiepileptics, Antidepressants, and Corticosteroids. It outlines specific pain types, conditions, and scenarios where each drug class is effective, key contraindications and risk factors for each category, standard therapeutic dosing to ensure safe and effective treatment. :
Designed for quick clinical reference, this fact sheet emphasizes practical applications, focusing on analgesic choice tailored to pain type, patient comorbidities, and safety considerations.
Category | When to Use | When to Avoid | Notes |
Acetaminophen | Mild to moderate pain; fever, headache, muscle pain. | Liver impairment; doses >4 g/day monitored or >3 g/day unmonitored. | No anti-inflammatory effect. |
NSAIDs | Pain with inflammation, e.g., arthritis. | GI bleeding, renal dysfunction, CHF, elderly, anticoagulants, corticosteroid use. | No NSAID is proven superior in efficacy or safety. Celecoxib is the only Cox-2 inhibitor. |
Opioids | Severe pain (somatic, visceral, neuropathic), cancer pain. | Long-term non-cancer pain unless under specialist care. | Side effects manageable (constipation, nausea). Taper on discontinuation. |
Antiepileptics | Neuropathic pain (e.g., gabapentin, pregabalin). | Use caution in renal failure. | Causes sedation, ataxia, edema. Effective in some neuropathic pain syndromes. |
Antidepressants | Neuropathic pain, mood disorders (e.g., TCAs, SNRIs). | Caution in older adults or cardiac disease (QT prolongation). | SSRIs are ineffective for pain. |
Corticosteroids | Severe pain (capsular stretch, bone pain, raised ICP). | NSAID co-use (GI bleeding). | Significant side effects (myopathy, hyperglycemia, adrenal insufficiency). |
Now with dosages
Category | When to Use | When to Avoid | Common Dosages |
Acetaminophen | Mild to moderate pain; fever, headache, muscle pain. | Liver impairment; doses >4 g/day monitored or >3 g/day unmonitored. | 325–650 mg every 4–6 hours; max 4 g/day (monitored). |
NSAIDs | Pain with inflammation, e.g., arthritis. | GI bleeding, renal dysfunction, CHF, elderly, anticoagulants, corticosteroid use. | Ibuprofen 200–800 mg every 6–8 hours (max 3.2 g/day); Naproxen 250–500 mg BID (max 1.5 g). |
Opioids | Severe pain (somatic, visceral, neuropathic), cancer pain. | Long-term non-cancer pain unless under specialist care. | Morphine 5–10 mg IV q4h or 15–30 mg PO q4h; Fentanyl patch 12–100 mcg/hour q72h. |
Antiepileptics | Neuropathic pain (e.g., gabapentin, pregabalin). | Use caution in renal failure. | Gabapentin 300–600 mg TID (max 3,600 mg/day); Pregabalin 75–150 mg BID (max 600 mg/day). |
Antidepressants | Neuropathic pain, mood disorders (e.g., TCAs, SNRIs). | Caution in older adults or cardiac disease (QT prolongation). | Amitriptyline 10–150 mg daily; Duloxetine 30–60 mg daily. |
Corticosteroids | Severe pain (capsular stretch, bone pain, raised ICP). | NSAID co-use (GI bleeding). | Dexamethasone 4–10 mg daily; Prednisone 10–40 mg daily. |