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Drugs Dictionary: Celecoxib

Celecoxib

Trade Name

Celebrex (primary brand name); generic celecoxib

Classification

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID); COX-2 selective inhibitor

Dosage/Route

  • * Dosage: Capsules: 50 mg, 100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg
  • * Route: Oral (PO)

Usual Dosage

  • * Osteoarthritis: 200 mg PO daily or 100 mg BID
  • * Rheumatoid Arthritis: 100-200 mg PO BID; max 400 mg/day
  • * Acute Pain/Primary Dysmenorrhea: 400 mg PO initially, then 200 mg BID PRN
  • * Ankylosing Spondylitis: 200 mg PO daily or BID; max 400 mg/day
  • * Children (JRA, ≥2 years): 50 mg BID (10-25 kg); 100 mg BID (>25 kg)
  • * Reduce dose in hepatic impairment; avoid in severe renal disease

Mechanism of Action

Selectively inhibits cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme, reducing prostaglandin synthesis. Decreases inflammation, pain, and fever with less GI irritation than non-selective NSAIDs (minimal COX-1 inhibition, sparing gastric mucosa)

Side Effects & Adverse Effects

  • * Side Effects: Headache, dyspepsia, diarrhea, edema
  • * Adverse Effects:
    •      – Cardiovascular risk (boxed warning; MI, stroke, esp. long-term/high dose).
    •      – GI bleeding/ulceration (boxed warning; lower risk than ibuprofen, but still possible).
    •      – Renal impairment (reduced renal blood flow; AKI risk).
    •      – Hypersensitivity (sulfa allergy; celecoxib contains sulfonamide)

Nursing Management (Implications & Teachings)

  • * Implications:
    •      – Monitor BP (hypertension risk), renal function (CrCl, urine output), GI symptoms (bleeding signs)
    •      – Assess for sulfa allergy (contraindicated)
    •      – Give with food/milk if GI upset occurs; swallow capsules whole
    •      – Avoid in post-CABG patients (CV risk)
  • * Teachings:
    •      – Take same time daily; with food if stomach upset
    •      – Report black stools, chest pain, or swelling
    •      – Avoid alcohol, other NSAIDs (increases GI/CV risk)
    •      – Stop and seek help for rash, breathing issues (allergy)

Indication for This Patient

  • * Osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis (pain, inflammation relief)
  • * Ankylosing spondylitis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA)
  • * Acute pain, primary dysmenorrhea (short-term)

Time

  • * Timing: Once or twice daily (consistent schedule)
  • * Onset: Pain relief in hours; full anti-inflammatory effect in days
  • * Peak: 2-3 hours
  • * Duration: 12-24 hours

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