Opioid Use Disorder Flashcards
Symptoms of opioid withdrawal
Abdominal pain, sweats, diarrhea, body aches
Pupillary dilation, lacrimation, rhinorrhea, mild fever
Dysphoric and irritable mood
If someone is acutely intoxicated with opioids, give ___.
If someone is withdrawing from opioids, give ___.
If someone is acutely intoxicated with opioids, give naloxone.
If someone is withdrawing from opioids, give suboxone (naloxone + buprenorphine) OR methadone.
Methadone and buprenorphine can both cause severe respiratory depression if combined with. . .
. . . benzodiazepines or alcohol
Buprenorphine is a ___ agonist while methadone is a ___ agonist.
Buprenorphine is a partial mu agonist (with a ceiling effect) agonist while methadone is a full mu agonist agonist.
Both are high affinity for the mu receptor and will therefore displace any other opioid in the body
What can a prescriber give for opioid withdrawal if they are not liscensed to give buprenorphine or methadone?
Clonidine (to reduce sweating, cramps, muscle aches, anxiety)
Dicyclomine (for abdominal cramps)
Loperamide (for diarrhea)
Ibuprofen (for muscle aches)
Ondansetron (for N/V)
Decongestants (for rhinorrhea)
Naltrexone for opioid dependency
An opioid antagonist
The oral formulation is not very effective due to noncompliance with therapy, however the injectable formulation is highly effective but cost prohibitive.
How long does it take for symptoms of opioid withdrawal to appear?
After hours or 1-2 days
It depends on the specific drug’s half-life and on the user’s tolerance
Heroin is fast on/fast off, with a very rapid and severe withdrawal. Opioids like methadone have a long half life with much less severe and more gradual withdrawal.
Recommended treatment for opioid withdrawal
Combination of clonidine (symptomatic treatment) with either slow-tapered methadone or buprenorphine (treating the root cause)
Blood pressure should be carefully monitored while using clonidine for this treatment, as autonomic instability may be present.
Mechanism of clonidine in opioid withdrawal
Blocking the alpha-2 adrenergic receptors in the locus ceruleus that share potassium channels with opioids, thereby blunting symptoms of opioid withdrawal.
Buprenorphine is usually administered. . .
. . . sublingually
If a patient on methadone therapy is experiencing withdrawal symptoms, but u-tox remains negative for any other recent opioid use than methadone, the next step is to. . .
. . . increase the methadone dose
This is preferable to adding clonidine for symptomatic treatment.
Patients on methadone for OUD therapy may desire to switch to suboxone therapy due to the inconvenience of daily methadone clinic visits. How should this be handled?
The methadone should be tapered in preparation for the switch.
Since buprenorphine is only a partial agonist and naloxone is a blocker, switching from methadone (a full agonist) can precipitate withdrawal symptoms if there is not a taper period.
SLUDGE mnemonic for opioid withdrawal
Salivation
Lacrimation
Urination
Diarrhea
Gastrointestinal symptoms
Emesis
Is opioid withdrawal life threatening?
No
It is just extremely uncomfortable.
Opioid overdose, on the other hand, is life threatening due to hypoventilation
First symptoms that should raise a red flag for opioid withdrawal
- Dilated pupils
- Sweating
- Anxiety