Lecture 9 (Exam 2) - Opioid Agonist/Antagonist & Opioid Antagonists Flashcards
What is pentazocine used for and at what dose? (IV, IM, PO)
Moderate chronic pain
IV: 10-30mg
IM: 20-30mg
PO: 50mg
slide 14
What is the PO dose (50mg) of Pentazocine equivalent to?
60mg Codeine
slide 14
What is the IM dose (20-30mg) of Pentazocine equivalent to that produces similar sedation and depression of ventilation?
10mg Morphine
slide 14
Why do we like Pentazocine for epidural analgesia?
Bc it has shorter duration < morphine
slide 14
Pentazocine s/e are similar to morphine’s.
What can it cause at high doses?
What cardiac effects do you see?
Dysphoria ✨
❤️: ⬆in HR, BP, pulmonary artery BP, LVEDP
slide 14
What must you consider when giving Pentazocine to pregnant women?
It crosses the placental barrier and can cause fetal depression. 👶🏻
slide 14
Is Butorphanol (Stadol) more potent than pentazocine? (Agonist and Antagonist effects)
Yes.
Agonist: 20x > (more potent than morphine)
Antagonist: 10-30x >
Butorphanol’s (Stadol) affinity for mu receptors to produce antagonism is ____.
It also has a ____ affinity for sigma, so dysphoria ✨ is low.
Its affinity for Kappa receptors is ______.
Mu: low
sigma: low
kappa: moderate ❄️
slide 15
What is the dose for Butorphanol (stadol) and how many Mg of morphine is this equivalent to?
And why is it given this route?
-2-3mg IM = 10mg morphine (depression of ventilation)
-absorbed immediately
slide 15
Which receptor has moderate affinity for Butorphanol (stadol) to prevent shivering and analgesia?
Kappa receptor! ❄️
slide 15 (he asked this question on a slide)
Butorphanol is metabolized in the liver, eliminated via _____ > urine and its E1/2 is ____ to ____ hours.
bile; 2.5-3.5 hours
slide 16
S/E of Butorphanol (stadol). (❤️, ✨, 💦)
sedation, nausea, diaphoresis 💦, dysphoria ✨, depresses ventilation, W/D can occur
❤️: ⬆ BP, PA BP, CO
slide 16
What can Butorphanol (stadol) cause synergistic effects with?
Other opioid agonists.
slide 16
Castillo wants us to know the least and most of the table (flip card)
Alfentanil:
most - % ionized & protein binding
least - clearance & Vd
Remifentanil:
most- clearance (4000)
Fentanyl:
most - Vd & effect site (brain equilibrium time)
Mu 1: “slow, cold, cant see, cant pee, but happy”
Mu 2: “cant breathe, cant poo & im addicted too”
Kappa: “sad, sleepy, peeing, cant see”
Delta: “ cant breathe, cant pee, cant poo & addicted too” (similar to Mu2)
What are the 7 Opioid Agonist-Antagonists from lecture?
- Pentazocine
- Butorphanol
- Nalbuphine
- Buprenorphine
- Nalorphine
- Bremazocine
- Dezocine
(Slide 11)
When are Opioid Agonist-Antagonists used?
They are used if unable to tolerate a pure agonist.
(Slide 12)
What receptors do Opioid Agonist-Antagonists bind to?
- µ receptors: partial effect (agonist) or no effect (competitive antagonist)
- Κ and δ receptors: partial effect (agonist)
(Slide 12)
What are the generalized side effects of Opioid Agonist-Antagonists?
They are the same as opioid agonists + dysphoric reactions. 😒
(Slide 12)
What are some of the advantages of Opioid Agonist-Antagonists?
Analgesia
Limited depression of ventilation
Low potential for physical dependence
Ceiling effect prevents additional responses
(Slide 12)
Pentazocine
1. What receptors does it bind to?
2. Will you have withdrawal symptoms?
3. It is ____ as potent as Nalorphine.
4. What is it antagonized by?
5. How is it excreted?
- Agonist effects on δ and κ receptors with weak antagonist activity
- Yes
- 1/5th as potent as Nalorphine
- Antagonized by Naloxone
- Glucoronide conjugates = urine
Extensive hepatic first pass (20% available post PO)
Elimination half-time: 2 to 3 hours
(Slide 13)
Why are opioid agonists used?
They are used to control acute or chronic pain.
Some are used for diarrhea & cough.
(Video 00:12)
Opioids bind to opioid receptors in the ____, _____, & ____.
Brain, spinal cord, & GI tract
(Video 00:43)
Nalbuphine, an opioid agonist-antagonist has equipotency with what gold standard drug?
Morphine, so 10 mg of Nalbuphine = 10 mg morphine. (Slide 17)