Opioids Flashcards
1
Q
Butorphanol
A
-partial agonist
-used to reverse opioid mediated sedation or respiratory depression
-it is a mu antagonist
-kappa agonist - not as good for sedation and respiratory depression
therefore it maintains analgesia through the kappa receptor
-very expensive
-quality of analgesia depends on quality of pain - if visceral then low quality of pain so not great for spays
-side effects include excitement
2
Q
which drugs are mu agonists
A
- morphine
- oxymorphine (not made any more)
- fentanyl
- remidentanil
- hydromorphone
3
Q
morphine
A
- very effective analgesic - most highly used
- less lipid soluble then others so crosses BBB slower and lasts longer
- it is metabolized to morphine-6-glucuronide (causes analgesia) and morphine-3-glucuronide (little analgesia, responsible for excitement)
- good analgesia 4-6hours after IM
- IV: histamine release and hypotension
- medium expensiveness
- not often used in horses because of its price
4
Q
Oxymorphine
A
- IV: no histamine release
- sedation
- respiration depression
- good CV stability
- doesnt last as long
- least amount of dysphoria
- very expensive and no longer available
5
Q
Hydromorphone
A
- IV: no histamine release but some excitement (cats)
- good CV stability. still get bradycardia
- more sedation than oxymorphine
- lots of dysphoria and lasts 2-3 hours IM
- relatively cheap
- dogs will vomit so can give them acepromazine to counteract it
- resp depression
6
Q
Fentanyl
A
- very good analgesia
- IV: takes 20-30 min
- can be given CRI or in patch form
- good CV stability
- lots of respiratory depression
- moderately expensive but very expensive in horses because need to use so much
7
Q
remifentanyl
A
- equally efficacious but half as potent as fentanyl
- very short acting so use CRI
- fast recovery
- bradycardia, hypotension, respiratory depression, histamine release
- non hepatic metabolism instead it is done in muscle and intestine
- very expensive
8
Q
Buprenorphine
A
- agonist-antagonist. partial mu agonist and kappa antagonist
- duration of 6-8 hours
- good oral absorption in cats
- may be difficult to reverse
9
Q
Tramadol
A
- weak mu agonist
- not a controlled substance so there is extra label use
- expensive
- OK for cats and horses
- only tend to dose 1-2 times per day
- not very effective in dogs
- serotonin and norepi reuptake inhibitor
- there is some a2 action (because it is close to mu receptor)
- good for acute and chronic pain that is moderate to severe
- often used in conjunction with NSAIDs for chronic pain and it may or may not cause sedation
10
Q
Meperidine
A
- primary activity at mu receptor
- good for acute pain and preanesthetic drug
- cheap
- metabolized to the active metabolite normeperidine
- increases heart rate
- some a2 agonist activity
- moderate length of action
- if given IV needs to be done slowly to avoid severe hypotension
- irritating if given SQ