The effects of pethidine are generally similar to those of morphine, despite its different structure. It also has local anaesthetic and atropine-like effects. Pethidine is readily absorbed orally, but its bioavailability is only about 50%. In the acute pain setting, pethidine can be administered by intramuscular injection, patient controlled analgesia, and also intraspinally, for example epidurally after Caesarean section.
Pethidine has a half-life of 3-5 hours and useful analgesia lasts between 2 and 4 hours after parenteral administration. Given at this frequency the active metabolite norpethidine (half-life 8-21 hours) accumulates (particularly in renal failure). This may lead to potentially serious adverse effects including tremor, twitching, agitation, confusion and (rarely) fitting. Norpethidine is estimated to possess half the analgesic potency of pethidine but twice the convulsive potency.1
Pethidine has some clinically significant drug interactions. Phenobarbitone and chlorpromazine enhance the production of norpethidine, and pethidine should not be given to patients taking monoamine oxidase inhibitors because of the risks of respiratory depression, hypertension and possibly coma.