Pentobarbital

DEA Class;  Rx

Common Brand Names; Nembutal

  • Sedative/Hypnotics; 
  • Barbiturates

Short-acting oral and parenteral barbiturate; for preoperative anxiety, sedation, refractory seizures, or to induce coma for increased intracranial pressure; rarely used for insomnia due to rapid development of tolerance; close monitoring for emerging or worsening suicidal thoughts/behavior or depression is recommended.

Indicated for procedural sedation or for use as a preanesthetic medication.

For the treatment of acute convulsive episodes, including status epilepticus.
For the short-term treatment of insomnia.
For the reduction of increased intracranial pressure (ICP) in patients with traumatic brain injury (i.e., head trauma).
For sedation maintenance and to alleviate agitation and anxiety in patients refractory to standard therapy who are mechanically-ventilated.

Hypersensitivity to barbiturates or excipients

History of latent porphyria

Angioedema (rare)

Bradycardia

Hypotension

Agitation

Ataxia

CNS depression

Confusion

Dizziness

Fever

Headache

Hyperkinesia

Nightmares

Nervousness

Somnolence (frequent)

Syncope

Rash

Stevens-Johnson syndrome

Constipation

Nausea

Vomiting

Agranulocytosis (rare)

Megaloblastic anemia with prolonged use (rare)

Injury of liver with prolonged use (rare)

SLE

Apnea

Too rapid administration may cause respiratory depression, laryngospasm, apnea, or vasodilation with fall in blood pressure

Exercise caution when administered to patients with acute or chronic pain; could result in paradoxical excitement or important symptoms could be masked

The use of barbiturates as sedatives in the postoperative surgical period and as adjuncts to cancer chemotherapy is well established

Administer barbiturates with caution in patients with hepatic damage and at reduced doses initially; barbiturates should not be administered to patients showing the premonitory signs of hepatic coma

Concomitant use of alcohol or other CNS depressants may produce additive CNS depressant effects

Elderly or debilitated patients may react to barbiturates with marked depression, excitement, and confusion; in some patients, barbiturates repeatedly produce excitement rather than depression

Parenteral solutions of barbiturates are highly alkaline; extreme care should be taken to avoid perivascular extravasation or intra-arterial injection; extravascular injection may cause local tissue damage with subsequent necrosis; consequences of intra-arterial injection may vary from transient pain to gangrene of the limb; any complaint of pain in the limb warrants stopping the injection

Barbiturates can cause fetal damage when administered to a pregnant woman; retrospective, case-controlled studies have suggested a connection between maternal consumption of barbiturates and a higher-than-expected incidence of fetal abnormalities

Exercise caution when a barbiturate is administered to a nursing woman; small amounts of barbiturates are excreted in the milk

Adults

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations.

Geriatric

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations.

Adolescents

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations. For procedural sedation, doses above 6 mg/kg/dose IM/IV/PO (Max: 100 mg/dose) are not usually necessary.

Children

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations. For procedural sedation, doses above 6 mg/kg/dose IM/IV/PO (Max: 100 mg/dose) are not usually necessary.

Infants

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations. For procedural sedation, doses above 6 mg/kg/dose IM or IV and 8 mg/kg/dose PO (Max: 100 mg/dose) are not usually necessary.

Neonates

Specific maximum dosage information not available; individualize dosage based on clinical parameters and serum pentobarbital concentrations. For procedural sedation, doses above 6 mg/kg/dose IV are not usually necessary.

Pentobarbital sodium

injectable solution: Schedule II

  • 50mg/mL

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