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Methocarbamol

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(Redirected from Robaxin)
Methocarbamol
Robaxin (oral, injectable)

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Summary
Common uses
Short-term relief of muscle spasm from acute musculoskeletal conditions (FDA)0, Tetanus adjunct (FDA, IV; rarely needed in current practice with immunization coverage)0
Pharmacy
Starting dose
Oral: 1500 mg PO QID for 2-3 days (load), then 750-1500 mg QID maintenance. IV/IM: 1000 mg every 8 hours for acute spasm
Preparations
Tablets 500, 750 mg; injection 100 mg/mL
US FDA Max
8 g/day (oral, short-term load); 6 g/day (chronic)
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral, intramuscular, intravenous
Onset
~30 minutes (oral)
Duration
4-6 hours
Half-life
1-2 hours[1]
Bioavailability
~100% (oral; near-complete absorption)[1]
Pregnancy
Limited human data.[citation needed]
Legal status
Rx-only in US. Not a controlled substance, distinguishing it from carisoprodol which is Schedule IV[1]
Purported mechanism
Centrally-acting skeletal muscle relaxant with mechanism not fully elucidated; effects appear mediated through general central nervous system depression rather than direct muscle relaxation or specific receptor activity. The lack of receptor-specific action explains both the relatively mild side-effect profile and the variable efficacy across patients.0 May cause harmless brown, black, blue, or green urine discoloration (the classic counseling point). Not associated with the abuse-liability concerns of carisoprodol or the anticholinergic burden of cyclobenzaprine, making methocarbamol a reasonable choice in elderly patients[1].

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 FDA Prescribing Information, Robaxin (methocarbamol), Pfizer/various, current revision. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2010/011011s032lbl.pdf