Ibuprofen Superior To Paracetamol For Pain Relief Following The Third Molar Removal
- byDoctor News Daily Team
- 17 July, 2025
- 0 Comments
- 0 Mins
Ibuprofen is superior to paracetamol for pain relief following third molar removal suggests a recent study published in the Evidence-Based Dentistry.
The Cochrane Oral Health Group's Trials Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Medline, Embase and the metaRegister of Controlled Trials were searched with no language restrictions.
Randomised controlled double-blinded clinical trials using the third molar model were included. Two review authors independently and in duplicate extracted data. The proportion of patients with at least 50% pain relief (based on total pain relief (TOTPAR) and summed pain intensity difference (SPID) data) was calculated for all three drugs at both two and six hours post-dosing and meta-analysed for comparison.
Results
• Seven studies involving 2241 patients were included.
• Two studies were considered to be at low risk of bias, three at high risk and two unclear risk of bias. Ibuprofen was found to be a superior analgesic to paracetamol at several doses, with high quality evidence suggesting that ibuprofen 400 mg is superior to 1000 mg paracetamol based on pain relief (estimated from TOTPAR data) and the use of rescue medication meta-analyses.
• Risk ratio (RR) for at least 50% pain relief (based on TOTPAR) at six hours was 1.47 favouring 400 mg ibuprofen over 1000 mg paracetamol, RR for not using rescue medication (also favouring ibuprofen) was 1.50
• For combined drug RR for at least 50% of the maximum pain relief over six hours of 1.77 (paracetamol 1000 mg and ibuprofen 400 mg) (one trial; moderate quality evidence).
• RR not using rescue medication 1.60 (two trials; moderate quality evidence).
• Adverse events were comparable between the treatment groups, but no formal analysis could be undertaken.
There is high quality evidence that ibuprofen is superior to paracetamol at doses of 200 mg to 512 mg and 600 mg to 1000 mg respectively based on pain relief and use of rescue medication data collected at six hours postoperatively. The majority of this evidence (five out of six trials) compared ibuprofen 400 mg with paracetamol 1000 mg, these are the most frequently prescribed doses in clinical practice. The novel combination drug is showing encouraging results based on the outcomes from two trials when compared to the single drugs.
Reference:
Ferraiolo, D., Veitz-Keenan, A. Ibuprofen is superior to paracetamol for pain relief following third molar removal. Evid Based Dent 15, 106–107 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ebd.6401059
Disclaimer: This website is designed for healthcare professionals and serves solely for informational purposes.
The content provided should not be interpreted as medical advice, diagnosis, treatment recommendations, prescriptions, or endorsements of specific medical practices. It is not a replacement for professional medical consultation or the expertise of a licensed healthcare provider.
Given the ever-evolving nature of medical science, we strive to keep our information accurate and up to date. However, we do not guarantee the completeness or accuracy of the content.
If you come across any inconsistencies, please reach out to us at
admin@doctornewsdaily.com.
We do not support or endorse medical opinions, treatments, or recommendations that contradict the advice of qualified healthcare professionals.
By using this website, you agree to our
Terms of Use,
Privacy Policy, and
Advertisement Policy.
For further details, please review our
Full Disclaimer.
Tags:
Recent News
Sleeping with Low Pillow Height May Increase Risk...
- 05 November, 2025
Novel Blood Test May Offer definitive diagnosis fo...
- 05 November, 2025
Esmolol Outperforms Landiolol in Reducing Mortalit...
- 05 November, 2025
Max Healthcare and Tata Institute for Genetics and...
- 05 November, 2025
Daily Newsletter
Get all the top stories from Blogs to keep track.
0 Comments
Post a comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!