Amerge
naratriptan hydrochloride
Pharmacologic class: Selective 5-hydroxytryptamine1 (5-HT1) agonist
Therapeutic class: Vascular headache suppressant, antimigraine drug
Pregnancy risk category C
Action
Binds with specific 5-HT1 receptors in intracranial blood vessels and sensory trigeminal nerves, leading to vasoconstriction and migraine relief
Availability
Tablets: 1 mg, 2.5 mg
Indications and dosages
➣ Migraine headache
Adults: 1 or 2.5 mg P.O. as single dose; may repeat in 4 hours. Don't exceed 5 mg in 24 hours; don't use to treat more than four headaches per month.
Dosage adjustment
• Mild to moderate renal or hepatic impairment
Contraindications
• Hypersensitivity to drug or its components
• Hemiplegic or basilar headaches
• Severe renal, cardiovascular or hepatic impairment
• History of cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular conditions
• Ischemic bowel disease
• Uncontrolled hypertension
• Use of ergot-type drugs (such as dihydroergotamine) and other 5-HT1 agonists within 24 hours
• MAO inhibitor use within past 14 days
Precautions
Use cautiously in:
• mild to moderate renal or hepatic impairment, cardiovascular risk factors
• elderly patients (not recommended)
• pregnant or breastfeeding patients
• children (safety not established).
Administration
• Know that drug does not prevent migraine.
• Give only if patient's cardiovascular status has been evaluated and determined to be safe, and if first dose can be given under supervision.
Adverse reactions
CNS: dizziness, drowsiness, malaise, fatigue, paresthesia, cerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, stroke, other cerebrovascular events
CV: significant blood pressure elevation including hypertensive crisis (rare), coronary artery vasospasm, myocardial infarction, ventricular fibrillation or tachycardia
GI: nausea, vomiting, colonic ischemia with abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea
Other: pain or pressure sensation in throat or neck, peripheral vascular ischemia, serotonin syndrome, hypersensitivity including anaphylaxis or anaphylactoid reactions
Interactions
Drug-drug. Ergot-type compounds (dihydroergotamine, methysergide): prolonged vasospastic reaction
Hormonal contraceptives: increased naratriptan blood level and effects
MAO inhibitors: increased systemic exposure to naratriptan, increased risk of adverse reactions
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors: weakness, hyperreflexia, incoordination Sibutramine: serotonin syndrome
Drug-herbs. S-adenosylmethionine (SAM-e), St. John's wort: increased risk of adverse serotonergic effects
Drug-behaviors. Cigarette smoking: increased naratriptan metabolism
Patient monitoring
• Maintain especially close monitoring in patients with cardiovascular risk factors (such as hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, obesity, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking, strong family history), postmenopausal women, and men older than age 40.
• Assess vital signs and ECG.
• Monitor neurologic status closely. Institute safety measures as needed to prevent injury.
Discontinue drug if serotonin syndrome is suspected.
Patient teaching
• Tell patient to take at first sign of headache.
• Advise patient to take second dose (if approved) at least 4 hours after first dose if headache has not gone away completely or has returned.
• Caution patient not to take more than two tablets in a 24-hour period.
Instruct patient how to recognize and immediately report signs and symptoms of stroke and other neurologic conditions, serotonin syndrome, hypersensitivity, or bloody diarrhea.
• Advise patient to avoid driving and other hazardous activities until he knows how drug affects concentration and alertness.
• Tell patient to avoid cigarette smoking and to discuss herb use with prescriber.
• As appropriate, review all other significant and life-threatening adverse reactions and interactions, especially those related to the drugs, herbs, and behaviors mentioned above.
naratriptan
(nar-a-trip-tan) naratriptan,Amerge
(trade name)Classification
Therapeutic: vascular headache suppressantsPharmacologic: five ht1 agonists
Indications
Action
Therapeutic effects
Pharmacokinetics
Time/action profile (↓ migraine pain)
ROUTE | ONSET | PEAK | DURATION |
---|---|---|---|
PO | 30–60 min | 2–3 hr† | up to 24 hr |
Contraindications/Precautions
Adverse Reactions/Side Effects
Central nervous system
- dizziness
- drowsiness
- malaise/fatigue
Cardiovascular
- coronary artery vasospasm (life-threatening)
- mi (life-threatening)
- ventricular fibrillation (life-threatening)
- ventricular tachycardia (life-threatening)
- myocardial ischemia
Gastrointestinal
- nausea
Neurologic
- paresthesia
Miscellaneous
- pain/pressure sensation in throat/neck
Interactions
Drug-Drug interaction
↑ risk of serotonin syndrome when used with SSRI or SNRI antidepressants.Cigarette smoking ↑ the metabolism of naratriptan.Blood levels and effects are ↑ by hormonal contraceptives.Avoid concurrent use (within 24 hr of each other) with ergot-containing drugs (dihydroergotamine) may result in prolonged vasospastic reactions.Avoid concurrent (within 2 wk) use with MAO inhibitors ; produces ↑ systemic exposure and risk of adverse reactions to naratriptan.↑ risk of serotinergic side effects including serotonin syndrome with St. John’s wort and SAMe.Route/Dosage
Availability (generic available)
Nursing implications
Nursing assessment
- Assess pain location, character, intensity, and duration and associated symptoms (photophobia, phonophobia, nausea, vomiting) during migraine attack.
- Monitor for serotonin syndrome in patients taking SSRIs or SNRIs concurrently with naratriptan.
Potential Nursing Diagnoses
Acute pain (Indications)Implementation
- Oral: Tablets may be administered at any time after the headache starts.
Patient/Family Teaching
- Inform patient that naratriptan should be used only during a migraine attack. It is meant to be used for relief of migraine attacks but not to prevent or reduce the number of attacks.
- Instruct patient to administer naratriptan as soon as symptoms of a migraine attack appear, but it may be administered any time during an attack. If migraine symptoms return, a 2nd dose may be used. Allow at least 4 hr between doses, and do not use more than 2 tablets in any 24-hr period. Do not use to treat more than 4 headaches per month.
- Advise patient that lying down in a darkened room following naratriptan administration may further help relieve headache.
- Advise patient that overuse (use more than 10 days/month) may lead to exacerbation of headache (migraine-like daily headaches, or as a marked increase in frequency of migraine attacks). May require gradual withdrawal of naratriptan and treatment of symptoms (transient worsening of headache).
- Advise patient to notify health care professional prior to next dose of naratriptan if pain or tightness in the chest occurs during use. If pain is severe or does not subside, notify health care professional immediately. If wheezing; heart throbbing; swelling of eyelids, face, or lips; skin rash; skin lumps; or hives occur, notify health care professional immediately and do not take more naratriptan without approval of health care professional. If feelings of tingling, heat, flushing, heaviness, pressure, drowsiness, dizziness, tiredness, or sickness develop, discuss with health care professional at next visit.
- Instruct patient not to take additional naratriptan if no response is seen with initial dose without consulting health care professional. There is no evidence that 5 mg provides greater relief than 2.5-mg dose. Additional naratriptan doses are not likely to be effective, and alternative medications, as previously discussed with health care professional, may be used.
- Naratriptan may cause dizziness or drowsiness. Caution patient to avoid driving or other activities requiring alertness until response to medication is known.
- Advise patient to avoid alcohol, which aggravates headaches, during naratriptan use.
- Advise patient to notify health care professional of all Rx or OTC medications, vitamins, or herbal products being taken and to consult with health care professional before taking other medications. Patients concurrently taking SSRI or SNRI antidepressants should notify health care professional promptly if signs of serotonin syndrome (mental status changes: agitation, hallucinations, coma; autonomic instability: tachycardia, labile BP, hyperthermia; neuromuscular aberrations: hyperreflexia, incoordination; and/or gastrointestinal symptoms: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) occur.
- Caution patient not to use naratriptan if pregnancy is planned or suspected or if breast feeding. Adequate contraception should be used during therapy.
Evaluation/Desired Outcomes
- Relief of migraine attack.