Lecture 13 - Opioids Flashcards

1
Q

What are opioids

A
  • drugs that act at the opioid receptor
  • have been used since ancient times
  • still harvested from opium poppies
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2
Q

Actions of opioids

A
  • analgesia
  • euphoria
  • impaired cough reflex
  • constipation
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3
Q

Side effects of opioids

A
  • respiratory depression
  • nausea and vomiting
  • dependence
  • miosis
  • pruritis
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4
Q

Opioid receptor

A
  • GPCR
  • agonist action is inhibitory - causes K+ to leave the cell
  • 3 kinds of receptors that all share the same intracellular signaling but different clinical respomse
  • prevents neurotransmitter release
  • also inhibits adenylyl cyclase
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5
Q

K-opioid receptor

A
  • produce analgesia
  • also dysphoria, including hallucinations, and diuresis
  • evidence suggests k-agonist are better in females than males
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6
Q
  • d-opioid receptor
A
  • some analgesia
  • activation may produce seizures
  • receptors may not usually reside on the cell surface
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7
Q
  • u-opioid receptor
A
  • strong analgesia, constipation, nausea, respiratory depressin, reduced cough reflex, tolerance and dependence
  • most drugs target this reeptor
  • naloxone and naltrexone are antagonists at the u-receptor
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8
Q

Sites of opioid action for analgesia

A
  • PAG

- spinal chord

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9
Q

Sites of opioid action for euphoria

A
  • NA

- VTA

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10
Q

Site of opioid action for respiratory depression, antitussive, nausea/vomiting

A
  • Medulla
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11
Q

Endogenous opioids

A
  • proenkephalin -> enkephalin (expressed in PAG)
  • prodynorphin -> Dynorphin
  • pro-opiomelanocortin -> b-endorphin
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12
Q

Why does u-inhibition int he PAG activate the descending analgesic pathway

A
  • u-receptor is extressed largely on GABA neuron
  • inhibition of GABA neuron by morphine thus leads to reduced inhibition by GABA neurotransmitter and more release of neurotransmitters in spinal chord -> reduce release of substance P and glutamate -? Less excitable SC neurons
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13
Q

Where else do opioids act

A
  • Forebrain: lateral sensory system (thalamus, cortex), medial system emotional responses (limbic system)
  • midbrain and brainstem: descending systems (PAG, raphe nuclei)
  • spinal cord: sensory modulation (dorsal horn)
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14
Q

How do opioids lead to euphoria

A
  • dopamine is a catecholamine
  • mesolimbic system is important for reward
  • VTA-NA synaptic input
  • opioids increase dopamine release in NA to produce reward and euphoria
  • kappa receptors are on dopaminergic neurons ->will inhibit Dopa release -> dysphoria
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15
Q

Opioid antagonists: Naloxone

A
  • short acting
  • low oral bioavailability
  • used for reversal of opioid overdose
  • used in combined therapy with agonist to reduce constipation
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16
Q

Opioid antagonist: Naltrexone

A
  • long acting
  • high oral bioavailability
  • reduces cravings in alcohol dependence
  • opioid dependency management
17
Q

3 effects of opioids on the gut

A
  • slow propulsion
  • decrease secretion
  • decrease reuptake of fluid