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Diphenoxylate

 
Drug Info: Diphenoxylate

Brand names: Lomotil®Lonox®

Chemical formula:



Diphenoxylate tablets

What are diphenoxylate tablets?

DIPHENOXYLATE (Lomotil®) helps to control diarrhea. Small amounts of atropine are combined with diphenoxylate in available products. Generic diphenoxylate tablets are available.

What should I tell my health care provider before I take this medicine?

They need to know if you have any of these conditions:
• bacterial food poisoning
• colitis
• dehydration
• Down's syndrome
• jaundice
• liver disease
• an unusual or allergic reaction to diphenoxylate, other medicines, foods, dyes, or preservatives
• pregnant or trying to get pregnant
• breast-feeding

How should I take this medicine?

Take diphenoxylate tablets by mouth. Follow the directions on the prescription label. Swallow the tablets with a drink of water. You can take the tablets with food. Take your doses at regular intervals. Do not take your medicine more often than directed. Once your diarrhea has been brought under control your prescriber or health care professional may reduce your doses.

Contact your pediatrician or health care professional regarding the use of this medicine in children. Special care may be needed.

Elderly patients may be more sensitive to the effects of diphenoxylate.

What if I miss a dose?

If you miss a dose, take it as soon as you can. If it is almost time for your next dose, take only that dose. Do not take double or extra doses.

What drug(s) may interact with diphenoxylate?

• alcohol
• barbiturate medicines for inducing sleep or treating seizures (convulsions)
• medicines for anxiety or sleeping problems, such as diazepam or temazepam
• medicines for treating mental depression
• medicines for movement abnormalities as in Parkinson's disease, or for gastrointestinal problems
naloxone
naltrexone

Tell your prescriber or health care professional about all other medicines you are taking, including non-prescription medicines, nutritional supplements, or herbal products. Also tell your prescriber or health care professional if you are a frequent user of drinks with caffeine or alcohol, if you smoke, or if you use illegal drugs. These may affect the way your medicine works. Check with your health care professional before stopping or starting any of your medicines.

What should I watch for while taking diphenoxylate?

If your symptoms do not improve after taking diphenoxylate for two days, check with your prescriber or health care professional, you may have a problem that needs further evaluation. Check with your prescriber or health care professional at once if you develop a fever or bloody diarrhea.

You may get drowsy or dizzy. Do not drive, use machinery, or do anything that needs mental alertness until you know how diphenoxylate affects you. Alcohol can increase possible drowsiness and dizziness; avoid alcoholic drinks.

Your mouth may get dry. Sucking hard candy or chewing sugarless gum and drinking plenty of water can help. Drinking plenty of water can also help prevent dehydration that can occur with diarrhea.

If you are going to have surgery, tell your prescriber or health care professional that you are taking diphenoxylate.

What side effects may I notice from taking diphenoxylate?

Serious side effects are rare at recommended doses; however, they can result from taking too large a dose; they include:
• bloated, swollen feeling
• blurred vision
• difficulty breathing, shortness of breath
• fast or irregular heartbeat
• stomach pain

Side effects that usually do not require medical attention (report to your prescriber or health care professional if they continue or are bothersome):
• drowsiness or dizziness
• dry mouth
• dry skin
• headache
• loss of appetite
• mood changes
• nausea, vomiting
• numbness or tingling in the hands and feet

Where can I keep my medicine?

Keep out of the reach of children in a container that small children cannot open. Accidental overdose can result in severe difficulty breathing, coma, permanent brain damage, and possibly death.

Store at room temperature between 15 and 30 degrees C (59 and 86 degrees F). Protect from light. Keep container tightly closed. Throw away any unused medicine after the expiration date.


Last updated: 7/1/2002

Important Disclaimer: The drug information provided here is for educational purposes only. It is intended to supplement, not substitute for, the diagnosis, treatment and advice of a medical professional. This drug information does not cover all possible uses, precautions, side effects and interactions. It should not be construed to indicate that this or any drug is safe for you. Consult your medical professional for guidance before using any prescription or over the counter drugs.

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Veterinary Dictionary: diphenoxylate
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A derivative of meperidine with little analgesic effect, but used as the hydrochloride for the management of diarrhea.

Wikipedia: Diphenoxylate
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Diphenoxylate
Systematic (IUPAC) name
ethyl 1-(3-cyano-3,3-diphenyl-propyl)- 4-phenyl-piperidine-4-carboxylate
Identifiers
CAS number 915-30-0
ATC code A07DA01
PubChem 13505
DrugBank APRD00366
Chemical data
Formula C30H32N2O2 
Mol. mass 452.587 g/mol
SMILES eMolecules & PubChem
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability  ?
Protein binding 74-95%
Metabolism  ?
Half life 12–14 hours
Excretion  ?
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat.

?

Legal status

Class A(UK) Schedule II(US)

Routes Oral
 Yes check.svgY(what is this?)  (verify)

Diphenoxylate (Lomotil, Co-phenotrope and others) is an opioid agonist used for the treatment of diarrhea that acts by slowing intestinal contractions and peristalsis allowing the body to consolidate intestinal contents and prolong transit time, thus allowing the intestines to draw moisture out of them at a normal or higher rate and therefore stop the formation of loose and liquid stools. It is the main active ingredient in the anti-peristaltic medication Lomotil, which also contains atropine as noted below.

Diphenoxylate is the prototype of a small subfamily of opioids including difenoxin and diphenoxylic acid (both are also active metabolites of diphenoxylate produced in the human body) and loperamide (which unlike the other three work exclusively in the intestines because it does not cross the blood-brain barrier). It was discovered at Janssen Pharmaceutica in 1956. It is a congener to the narcotic pethidine of which the common brand names are Dolantin and Demerol amongst others. Other somewhat more distant relatives include alphaprodine (Nisentil) and piritramide (Dipidolor).

Contents

Actions and Use

Diphenoxylate works by decreasing the speed and amplitude of wave-live movements of the intestines (peristalsis) therefore allowing the body time to remove moisture from the intestinal contents and consolidate waste product into a dense solid form rather than loose and watery as is diarrhoea.

Similar to loperamide and difenoxin preparations, the usual protocol is to take a loading dose (usually two tablets or the quantity of liquid containing 5 mg of diphenoxylate) and then the standard dose of one tablet every 3 to 4 hours prn over a time period not to exceed 48 hours unless so ordered by the physician. Long-term intermittent prn users should contact their physician if the need for it arises more than was usual at the outset of therapy as tolerance to diphenoxylate can occur. Those taking it in large quantities or continuously over an extended period should taper down the dose on a schedule devised by the physician and/or pharmacist.

Related Drugs

Diphenoxylate is metabolised in the body to yield difenoxin. Difenoxin is another centrally-acting antidiarrhoeal that is 250 to 400 per cent the strength of diphenoxylate via the oral route and is also able to be manufactured and is distributed as Motofen, (1 mg difenoxin/25 µg atropine), which was introduced in the United States in the late 1990s after being discovered in 1970 at Janssen.

The Diphenoxylate-Loperamide subfamily of gastrointestinal drugs works directly on opioid receptors, which can be found in the intestine, brain, and spinal cord. Diphenoxylate itself crosses the blood-brain barrier. This being the case, this medication is potentially habit-forming and can generate significant tolerance if taken continuously for a protracted period. Physical dependence is most common particularly with high doses and/or long-term use. The CNS penetration of diphenoxylate makes it an agent that can cause euphoria and other psychoactive effects, which could over time lead to habituation and dependency on the drug in the user. As with other medicinal opioids, iatrogenic addiction is uncommon although physical dependence secondary to treatment of a functional bowel disorder with diphenoxylate for more than 45–90 days may very well occur; it typically requires the use of high doses to impart a morbid seek orientation for the drug in the user. Because of this, diphenoxylate is manufactured and marketed as a combination drug with atropine (Lomotil, Pfizer) as an abuse deterrent. Lomotil was used during the Apollo program, as was pethidine.[1][2]

Inclusion of Atropine

The atropine additive strategy is designed to discourage use of the drug in a manner inconsistent with its labelling and physician and manufacturer instructions; in theory, the anticholinergic effect of atropine will produce severe weakness and nausea if standard dosage is exceeded, and at the time diphenoxylate was introduced in the United States a number of manufacturers used this strategy with oral forms of morphine, methadone (also using scopolamine), oxycodone and others. Currently, the only other narcotic produced in the United States to use this strategy is Motofen (difenoxin 1 mg with 25 µg atropine sulphate).

The 25 µg of atropine present in each 2½ mg Lomotil tablet is 1/40 of the standard therapeutic dose of atropine via the oral route for normal anticholinergic uses.

Use In Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Diarrhoea resulting from cyclic or diarrhoea-predominant IBS may not be optimally treated with diphenoxylate or difenoxin, and may not respond to a meaningful degree to loperamide; thus, diarrhoea and cramping which does not respond to belladonna derivatives and non-centrally-acting soothing and/or stool-desiccating agents are often treated with conservative doses of codeine, especially where paregoric and/or laudanum are not currently in general use.

Diarrhoea accompanied by significant cramping or intestinal cramping alone may benefit from either adding another smooth-muscle agent to the protocol such as dicycloverine, papaverine, or orphenadrine (which accomplishes several things at once since it is an antihistamine as noted above). Such cases may also benefit from a switch to paregoric, laudanum, powdered or granulated opium, or B&O (i.e. Belladonna & Opium) Suppositories as all of the above include many drugs which work together and have non-narcotic alkaloids like papaverine and other components like oils, waxes, resins &c. which work elsewhere in the body. Pantopon (Opium Alkaloids Hydrochlorides) and similar preparations have much of the advantages of whole opium in injectable form

Regulation

As noted below, diphenoxylate is listed in national controlled-substances and drugs laws such as pure diphenoxylate being in Annex/Schedule/List II of the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961 and also in similarly numbered schedules of laws passed to implement the Convention such as the Canadian Controlled Substances Act and the Betäubungsmittelgesetz in Germany and the Suchtgiftverordnung of Austria. This level of regulation is also implemented in the Misuse of Drugs Act of 1971 (UK), the French opium law of 31. December 1970, and royal decrees and laws passed by practically all other countries in Europe, the Pacific Rim, South Asia and the Middle East

In many cases, Lomotil type preparations with extra active ingredients are over the counter and/or subject to provincial and/or municipal control or minimal national oversight; the schedule numbers vary by country.

This medication is classified as a Schedule V under the United States' Comprehensive Drug Abuse Control & Prevention Act of 1970 aka Controlled Substances Act (CSA) (21 U.S.C. § 801 et. seq.) by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in the United States when used in preparations. When diphenoxylate is used alone, it is classified as a Schedule II; having one or more other active ingredients makes it Schedule V. As such, diphenoxylate/atropine tablets are under state and local control and where allowed by state law, can be obtained by signing a log book and the customer can receive up to 48 units (tablets or capsules) in any 48-hour period, much like the 4 fl. oz. limit on codeine, dihydrocodeine, dionine (ethylmorphine), and opium cough syrups and gastrointestinal drugs.

The other Schedule V narcotics, all of which may be obtained in some states without prescription as noted in this article, are cough syrups containing low amounts of codeine, ethylmorphine, and dihydrocodeine and dilute formulations of opium such as Parepectolin. Very dilute syrups of hydrocodone containing three or more other active ingredients were also Schedule V and often available without prescription until rescheduling to Schedule III circa or about 1990.

As for the rest of the family, in the United States difenoxin & atropine tablets are Schedule IV and therefore federally controlled and require a prescription, loperamide is unscheduled and not on prescription, and diphenoxylic acid is classified as a form of diphenoxylate. Other Schedule IV narcotics also include butorphanol nasal spray, pentazocine, propoxyphene-based mixtures and others of the same type. Unscheduled narcotics and opioid agonists include loperamide (OTC), nalbuphine (Rx), and tramadol (Rx).

As an example of the degree of regulation at the federal level, the most commonly-known Schedule IV drug of any type is Valium as well as nearly all other benzodiazepines, whereas Schedule III contains Vicodin (hydrocodone bitartrate), and Schedule II contains cocaine, secobarbital, methamphetamine, methylphenidate, all forms of morphine and derivatves like Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride), oxymorphone, and oxycodone. Examples of a legitimate medical drug which are generally illegal (Schedule I) would include the morphine derivatives Vilan (nicomorphine HCl), Paramorfan (dihydromorphine HCl) and the synthetics Ketodur (ketobemidone), Dipidolor (piritramide), and Palfium (dextromoramide).

A Schedule V purchase involves the customer having to sign a dispensary log after presenting proper identification to the pharmacist; the Schedule V ledger lists transactions going back two years and must have pages that are difficult to remove and usually pre-numbered. This schedule devolves control over the drugs therein to state and local governments, so in states where it cannot be bought over the counter it may or may not require the duplicate, triplicate, or quintuplicate narcotic prescription order form defined by state law.

Narcotic preparations for gastrointestinal problems tend to be the more available of the narcotics; other narcotics for pain like the Tylenol With Codeine series, (even No. 1 and other combination products with the same quantity and therefore narcotic content number (7½ or 8 mg, i.e. 1/8 of a grain of codeine phosphate per tablet) are more restricted and therefore all Schedule III.

Whilst Lomotil is Schedule V, in some states it may not be available without prescription as it is classified as requiring a prescription order under the general prescription law for other reasons including the atropine content and the dangers of improper use not unlike antibiotics, insulin, corticosteroids and the like. This is the same as the regulation of Donnagel PG some states, when it was available, it was a prescription drug because of the belladonna content; the stimulant pyrovalerone is another Schedule V but prescription-only drug.

References

  1. ^ W. Royce Hawkins, M.D., John F. Zieglschmid, M.D., Clinical aspects of crew health
  2. ^ Apollo Medical Kits
  • Merlo M, Brown CH, The effect of diphenoxylate hydrochloride on diarrhea, Am J Gastroenterol. 1960 Dec;34:625-30.
  • Kasic AM, Treatment of diarrhea in irritable colon, including preliminary observations with a new antidiarrheal agent, diphenoxylate hydrochloride (Lomotil), Am J Gastroenterol. 1961 Jan;35:46-9.

 
 
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Drug Info. Gold Standard. Copyright © 2008 by Gold Standard. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Diphenoxylate" Read more