Opioids Flashcards
Opioids vs Opiates
Opioid
- Medication that work at the opioid receptor
- Narcotics: Used to describe sleep agents, now for addictive drugs
- Associated with pain relief, diarrhea treatment and euphoria
Opiates
- Natural plant
- Active compounds: morphine, codeine
Opioids MOA
Opioid receptor agonist; block release of pain neurotransmitters from the nociceptive fibers; activate presynaptic receptors on GABA neurons (inhibit GABA release)
Opioid Receptors
Mu (Morphone= Mu agnoist): found in the brainstem and medial thalamus; responsible for analgesia, respiratory depression, euphoria, sedation, decreased GI motility and physical dependence
- Mu1: analgesia, euphoria and serenity
- Mu2 (OP3 or MOR– morphine opioid receptors): respiratory depression, pruritus, prolactin release, dependence, anorexia, and sedation
Kappa (OP2 or KOR– kappa opioid receptors): limbic and other diencephalic areas, brainstem, and spinal cord; responsible for analgesia, sedation, dyspena, dependence, dysphoria, and respiratory depression
Delta: located largely in the brain; effects are not well studies (may be psychomimetic and dysphoric effects)
Opioid Agonist
Full agonist (complete response)
- Morphine
- Fentanyl
- Hydromorphone
- Codeine
- Oxycodone
- Methadone
- Heroin
Partial agonist (partial response or antagonist) - Analgesic ceiling effect: Buprenorphine (kappa receptor), Butorphanol
Antagonist (block response)
- Naloxone, Naltrexone
- Suboxone (buprenorphine + naloxone)
Short Acting Opioids
- Codeine
- Hydrocodone
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
- Morphine (MSIR, Raxanol)
- Oxycodone
- Oxymorphone (Opana)
- Fentanyl (Actiq)
USE
- Acute pain
- Incident pain
- Breakthrough pain
- For activity: post op, physical therapy, travel
Long Acting Opioids
- Fentanyl (transdermal)
- Levorphanol
- Methadone
- Morphine (MS Contin, Kadian, Azinza)
- Oxycodone (Oxycontin)
- Oxymorphone (Opana ER)
Use
- Chronic pain
- Moderate to severe pain
d
d
Opioid ADR
- Sedation, lethargy
- Constipation
- Respiratory depression
- N/V
- Pruritus/urticaria (direct histamine response, can also cause bronchospasm)
Opioid Overdose
Triad
- Miosis
- Loss of consciousness
- Respiratory depression
- Much worse with other CNS depressant (EtOH)
- Antidote: Naloxone (Narcan)
Morphine
- Crosses BBB
- ADR: direct histamine release; respiratory depression; orthostasis; constipation; N/V
- Drug interactions rare
- t1/2= 2hrs
Codeine
- MOA: weak mu agnoist
- Metabolized to morphine (50% potency of morphine)
- t1/2= 2.5-3hrs
- CYP 2D6 substrate: inhibited by bupropion, cimetidine, celecoxib, cocaine; warning for ultra-rapid metabolizers– lots of codeine!!!! (nursing infants, baby might be ultra rapid metabolizers)
Oxycodone (Oxycontin, Percocet)
- Activity at mu and kappa receptors
- High potency analgesia
- t1/2= 2.5-3 hrs
- Metabolized by CYP 2D6 to oxymorphone
- Combo products: oxycodone/acetaminophen (percocet)
- highly abused
Hydocodone
- Most commonly used opioid
- Weak activity at mu receptor
- t1/2= 4hrs
- Metabolized by CYP 2D6 to hydromorphone
- Combo products: hydrocodone/acetaminophen (Vicodin); hydrocodone/ibuprofen (Vicoprofen)
Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
- Activity at mu and delta receptors
- More potent than morphine
- t1/2= 4 hrs
- Metabolized by glucuronidation
Oxymorphone (Opana)
- 10x more potent than morphine
- No P450 interactions