Nonopioid Analgesics
Nonopioid analgesics are pain-relieving drugs that do not act primarily through opioid receptors. The category centres on the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which inhibit cyclooxygenase enzymes, and on acetaminophen (paracetamol). These agents are the first-line choice for many forms of mild to moderate nociceptive and inflammatory pain and are a foundation of multimodal analgesia.
Definition
Nonopioid analgesics are antipyretic and analgesic drugs - chiefly the NSAIDs and acetaminophen - that relieve pain without acting through opioid receptors, most acting by inhibiting cyclooxygenase-mediated prostaglandin synthesis.
Scope
The entry covers the main nonopioid drug classes - NSAIDs (including selective COX-2 inhibitors) and acetaminophen - their cyclooxygenase-related mechanism, the analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects they share, and the characteristic adverse-effect profiles (gastrointestinal, renal, cardiovascular, and hepatic) that constrain their use. It treats the topic as a pharmacological category, not as prescribing guidance.
Core questions
- How does cyclooxygenase inhibition produce analgesia and anti-inflammatory effects?
- How do nonselective NSAIDs, selective COX-2 inhibitors, and acetaminophen differ in mechanism and side-effect profile?
- Why are NSAIDs limited by gastrointestinal, renal, and cardiovascular adverse effects?
- What is the place of nonopioids in multimodal analgesia and opioid-sparing strategies?
Key concepts
- Cyclooxygenase (COX-1 and COX-2) inhibition
- Prostaglandin-mediated sensitisation
- Nonselective NSAIDs versus selective COX-2 inhibitors
- Acetaminophen (paracetamol)
- Ceiling effect of analgesia
- Gastrointestinal, renal, cardiovascular, and hepatic toxicity
- Opioid-sparing effect
Mechanisms
Most NSAIDs relieve pain by inhibiting cyclooxygenase (COX), the enzyme that converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandins, thereby reducing the prostaglandin-mediated sensitisation of peripheral nociceptors and contributing central effects as well. COX-1 supports physiological functions such as gastric mucosal protection and platelet aggregation, while COX-2 is induced at sites of inflammation; nonselective NSAIDs inhibit both, which underlies their gastrointestinal toxicity, whereas selective COX-2 inhibitors spare COX-1 but carry cardiovascular considerations. Acetaminophen has analgesic and antipyretic effects with weak anti-inflammatory action, and its mechanism is incompletely understood and only partly explained by central cyclooxygenase inhibition; in overdose it can cause hepatotoxicity. Many nonopioids show a ceiling effect, beyond which higher doses add toxicity rather than analgesia.
Clinical relevance
Nonopioid analgesics are among the most widely used medicines and a core element of opioid-sparing, multimodal pain care; appraising their balance of analgesic benefit against organ-specific toxicity is part of evidence evaluation in pain medicine. This entry describes their pharmacology and is a reference resource, not a source of dosing or individualised treatment advice.
Epidemiology
Because NSAIDs and acetaminophen are available in many settings, including over the counter, exposure in the population is very high. NSAID-related gastrointestinal complications are a recognised cause of morbidity, and acetaminophen overdose is a leading cause of acute liver injury, which makes the safety profile of these drugs a public-health concern as well as a clinical one.
History
Salicylate-containing remedies have ancient roots, and aspirin was introduced at the end of the nineteenth century; the elucidation of prostaglandin synthesis and the demonstration that NSAIDs act by inhibiting cyclooxygenase in the 1970s clarified their mechanism. The later distinction between COX-1 and COX-2 led to the development of selective COX-2 inhibitors, and subsequent recognition of their cardiovascular effects refined how the whole class is understood.
Debates
- How should the gastrointestinal and cardiovascular risks of NSAIDs be balanced?
- Nonselective NSAIDs raise gastrointestinal risk while selective COX-2 inhibitors reduce that risk but raise cardiovascular concerns; weighing these competing harms against analgesic benefit remains a central question in nonopioid pharmacotherapy.
Related topics
Seminal works
- wolfe-1999
- cohen-2021
Frequently asked questions
- How do NSAIDs differ from acetaminophen?
- NSAIDs inhibit cyclooxygenase peripherally and centrally and have meaningful anti-inflammatory effects but carry gastrointestinal, renal, and cardiovascular risks, whereas acetaminophen has analgesic and antipyretic effects with little anti-inflammatory action and is chiefly limited by the risk of liver injury in overdose.
- Why are nonopioid analgesics emphasised in multimodal pain care?
- Because they relieve pain by mechanisms different from opioids, combining them with other agents can improve pain control and reduce the opioid dose needed, which is the basis of opioid-sparing, multimodal analgesia.