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Skeletal Muscle Relaxants


Author(s): Sharon See | Regina Ginzburg
doi: 10.1592/phco.28.2.207
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  Pharmacotherapy
 
Print ISSN: 0277-0008
Volume: 28 | Issue: 2
Cover date: February 2008
Page(s): 207-213
 
 
  Key Words
 
skeletal muscle relaxants, antispasticity agents, antispasmodics.
 
  Abstract

Health care providers prescribe skeletal muscle relaxants for a variety of indications. However, the comparative efficacy of these drugs is not well known. Skeletal muscle relaxants consist of both antispasticity and antispasmodic agents, a distinction prescribers often overlook. The antispasticity agents—baclofen, tizanidine, dantrolene, and diazepam—aid in improving muscle hypertonicity and involuntary jerks. Antispasmodic agents, such as cyclobenzaprine, are primarily used to treat musculoskeletal conditions. Much of the evidence from clinical trials regarding skeletal muscle relaxants is limited because of poor methodologic design, insensitive assessment methods, and small numbers of patients. Although trial results seem to support the use of these agents for their respective indications, efficacy data from comparator trials did not particularly favor one skeletal muscle relaxant over another. Therefore, the choice of a skeletal muscle relaxant should be based on its adverse-effect profile, tolerability, and cost.

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
1Clinical Pharmacy Practice Department, St. John's University College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, Queens, New York, and the Beth Israel Residency in Urban Family Practice, New York, New York.
2Clinical Pharmacy Practice Department, St. John's University College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, Queens, New York, and the Beth Israel Residency in Urban Family Practice, New York, New York.
*Address reprint requests to Sharon See, Pharm.D., BCPS, St. John's University College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, 8000 Utopia Parkway, Queens, NY 11439