opiates Flashcards
THE OPIATES
Definitional Issues
▪ Naturally occurring, derived, and synthetic
compunds with analagesic properites**
▪ Often referred to as “narcotic analgesics” narcotic= drowsiness inducing, analgesic = pain treatment
now: pain agents that have potential to be dependant upon***
problems: saying theyre narcotics links them with coke and meth
- better to say analgesic alone than narcotic analgesic
Naturally Occuring
▪ Morphine, codeine, and thebaine found in opium
▪ Opium is the sap from seedpods of opium poppy
- scratches are made on the seedpod –> results in white substance ooze from seedpod –> turns reddish brown with air (dries and hardens) –> then scraped off as a syruppy substance (this is opium)
Opium is
▪ Morphine – 10%
▪ Codeine - .75 to 2.5 %
▪ Thebaine - <1%
Opiate Derivatives/Semi-Synthetics
▪ Heroin (semi synthetic)
- adding acetyl group –> becomes more potent and lipid soluble than morphine (3x more potent than morphine)
▪ Other examples
- Hydromorphone –> derived from morphine
- Oxycodone –> derived from thebaine
- Oxymorphone –> derived from morphine or codeine
- Hydrocodone –> derived from codeine or thebaine
THE OPIATES
Synthetic
▪ Meperdine –> common pain killer (less potent than morphine)
▪ Methadone –> treats chronic pain , is used to treat dependency programming (less potent than morphine in treating pain) less potent iin euphoric effects than morphine)
▪ Other examples
▪ Fentanyl –> 60s marketed as sublimase as an IV anaesthetic
70/80s tablets to treat chronic pain associated with cancer
- same time, marketed as a patch
- became a concern on the streets (dismodification of patches)
2005–> outbreaks of deaths with fent use
- reason was fent is 30-50 times more potent than heroine
LAMM
- used to treat opiate depedancy
laurie has a cross tolerance with opiates and alc
Opiate Antagonists
▪ Useful in treating overdoses
▪ Naloxone (brand name or trade name: narcan)
▪ Nalorphine
- reverse depressed breathing in minutes
- fx don’t last as long and don’t produce euphoria like other opiates
Uses
▪ Medical uses include
▪ primary use Treatment of pain (acute pain, after surgery, chronic pain)
▪ Treatment of diarrhea
- oldest use to treat diarrhea
- reduces peristalsis and increase tension (may lead to constipation)
▪ Treatment of cough
- effective opiate = codeine
Uses and History
Medical use dates back hundreds of years
▪ opium Documented in Egyptian medical scrolls dating
back to 1550 BC
- prevent excessive crying of children
▪ In second century AD, Claudius Galen (roman gladiator) recommended it for practically everything
- resists poison, vanomous bites, cures chronic headaches, vertigo, deafness (over prescibing drug exaple)
Uses and History
Medical use dates back hundreds of years
▪ Documented in Egyptian medical scrolls dating
back to 1550 BC
▪ In second century AD, Galen recommended it for
practically everything
▪ In 1520, medicinal drink called laudanum
introduced –> 46% alcohol and 1 gram of opium
- Miss windlows soothing syrup
- pennys worth of peace
18th century: women took it for menstrual pain
- took it for 2 things
- for tooth aches - DeQuincy T loved it (Englihs opium eater )
Uses and History
Recreational use dates back hundreds of years
(at least!)
▪ 2nd Century AD: Galen noted that opium cakes
and candy sold everywhere on the street
▪ 18th Century: Opium Dens Appear in China, and
elsewhere (e.g, North America, Asia, France) With
Chinese “Invention” of Opium Smoking (heating and inhaling)
- provided with drug and paraphernalia to use the drug
- lined up or separated
History
Up until early to mid 1800s, opium use was
widely socially accepted and not perceived
as a social or medical problem
– despite large number of individuals being
addicted (wasnt a controlled substance **) - laudinum was particularity acceptable
- wasn’t seen as a social medical problem until 1860/70s
- 2500000 people in US were addicted
▪ Mid to late 1800s saw some governmental
efforts in US and Britain to regulate use and selling of drug
- some people saw this as government intervention –> saw this as racist to chinese people
- Due to concern about negative consequences
of chronic opium use or anti-Chinese
prejudice?
History
▪ San Franciso Newspaper Quote
“…many women and young girls, as wellas
young men of respectable family, were being
induced to visit the dens, where they were
ruined morally and otherwise”
- not the use of alcohol just opium
History
▪ Canada: Opium Act, 1908: prohibited the “importation, manufacture, and sale of opium for other than medicinal purposes” –> targeted the dealers of the drug
▪ Canada: Opium and Narcotic Act, 1911:
prohibited the “improper use of Opium and other drugs” t target the users as well
MOA
▪ Opiates will be administered
▪ Orally –> tablet (historically = opium cake)
▪ Parenterally
▪ Via inhalation
▪ Transdermally –> patches to treat chronic pain (slow release)
Distribution
▪ High concentrations in lungs, liver, spleen
▪ Readily passes thru placental barrier –> infants will exhbit withdrawal symptoms if mom used it
▪ In brain, concentrated in limbic system, basal
ganglia, nucleus acumbens, ventral tegmental
areas, periaqueductal gray area (pain area), brain
stem (rephei nuclei)
Metabolization
▪ Codeine and much of heroin inactive until
metabolized –> into morphine , codeine is morphne + other metabs
▪ Metabolization is rapid
- 4-6 hours 1/2 life
▪ Exception is some of the synthetic compounds (e.g.,
methadone, LAAM)
- these are longer 1/2 lives
- methadone 24 hours
- LAMM longer than 24 hours
- makes them important in treating pain