test 5 opioids Flashcards

1
Q

Pain

A
  • Acute or chronic unpleasant sensation
  • Result of complex neurochemical processes in the peripheral and central nervous system
  • Subjective
  • Management is one of medicine’s greatest challenges
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2
Q

Opioids

A
  • Natural, semisynthetic, or synthetic compounds that produce morphine-like effects
  • Act by binding to specific opioid receptors in CNS to produce effects that mimic the action of endogenous peptide neurotransmitters
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3
Q

Natural Opioids “Opiates” come from

A

• Opium poppy seed pod

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4
Q

Opioid Use and abuse

A
  • Primary use: relieve intense pain from surgery, injury or chronic disease
  • Abuse
    * Widespread availability
    * Euphoric properties
  • Antagonists exist to reverse the actions
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5
Q

Opioid Effects

A

• G protein coupled receptors  Inhibit adenylyl cyclase
• Decrease presynaptic Ca2+ influx (decreases neurotransmitter at the synaptic vessible)
• Increase postsynaptic K+ efflux (hyperpolarization)
- IMPEDES NEURONAL FIRING AND TRANSMITTER RELEASE

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6
Q

Opioid Effects Mediated by 3 receptor families

A

Mu μ
• Analgesia via modulating nociception: thermal, chemical, and mechanical
• High affinity for morphine
Kappa κ
• Analgesia via modulating nociception: thermal and chemical
Delta δ
• Regulate nociception
• High affinity for enkephalins (peptide released in brain)

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7
Q

Opioid Adverse Effects

A
  • hypotension
  • dysphoria (anxiety, depression)
  • sedation
  • constipation
  • urinary retention
  • nausea
  • potential for addiction
  • RESPIRATORY DEPRESSION
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8
Q

Opioids differ in

A
  • Receptor affinity
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Available routes of administration
  • Adverse effect profiles
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9
Q

Morphine

A
  • Major analgesic drug in crude opium
  • Strong μ agonist
  • Mechanism of Action: interacts with opioid receptors on membranes of cells in CNS, GI tract and bladder
    * ↓ release of substance P (modulates pain perception in spinal cord)
    * Inhibits release of excitatory transmitters from nerve terminals carrying painful stimuli
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10
Q

Morphine Actions

A
  • Analgesia
    * ↑ pain threshold at spinal cord level
    * Alters brain’s perception of pain
  • Euphoria
  • Respiratory depression
    * Most common cause of death in acute overdose
    * Tolerance develops quickly
  • Depression of cough reflex
  • Miosis
    * Important for diagnosis of overdose
    * No tolerance develops
  • Emesis
  • Decreased GI motility
    * Constipation with little tolerance developing
  • Cardiovascular
    * Low dose: no major effects on BP or HR
    * High dose: hypotension and bradycardia
  • Histamine release
    * Urticaria, sweating, vasodilation, bronchoconstriction
  • Increases ADH
    * Urinary retention
  • Prolongs labor
    * Decreases strength, duration and frequency of contractions
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11
Q

Morphine Pharmacokinetics

A
  • Significant 1st pass effect
    * IM, SQ, IV
    * Oral: slow and erratic absorption
  • Rapidly enters all body tissues, including fetus
  • Metabolized in liver, excreted in urine
  • DOA: 4-5 hours
  • Special populations
    * Neonates- cannot metabolize
    * Elderly- more sensitive, lower starting doses
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12
Q

Morphine Adverse Effects

A
  • Severe respiratory depression
  • Tolerance and physical dependence
    * Tolerance develops in all aspects EXCEPT pinpoint pupils and constipation
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13
Q

Codeine

A
  • Weak analgesic found in crude opium
  • Converted to morphine in the liver
  • Commonly used with acetaminophen for pain
  • Good antitussive (stop a cough)
    * Removed from over the counter preparations due to abuse
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14
Q

Semisynthetic Derivatives of Morphine

A
  • Oxycodone (Oxycontin)
    * Oral (2x analgesia of morphine)
    * Abuse of sustained release preparations has resulted in many deaths
  • Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
    * Oral (8-10x more potent than morphine)
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15
Q

Semisynthetic Derivatives of Codeine

A
  • Hydrocodone (Vicodin)

* Oral analgesic effect=morphine

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16
Q

Synthetic Opioids: Fentanyl

A
  • 100x analgesic potency of morphine
  • Rapid onset, short duration
  • Uses
    * Anesthesia
    * Labor epidural with local anesthetics
    * Post-op pain
    * Cancer pain – transmucosal or transdermal patch
17
Q

Synthetic Opioids: Meperidine (Demerol)

A
  • Lower potency
  • Acute pain
  • Short duration of action
  • Short term use only (<48 hours)
18
Q

Opioid dependence

A
  • responsible for more overdose deaths than cocaine and heroin combined
19
Q

Opioid withdrawal stage I

A
  • up to 8 hours
  • anxiety
  • drug craving
20
Q

Opioid withdrawal stage II

A
  • 8 to 24 hours
  • anxiety
  • insomnia
  • GI disturbance
  • Rhinorrhea (runny nose)
  • Mydriasis
  • Diaphoresis
21
Q

Opioid withdrawal stage III

A
  • up to 3 days
  • tachycardia
  • nausea, vomiting
  • hypertension
  • diarrhea
  • fever
  • chills
  • tremors
  • seizure
  • muscle spasms
22
Q

Methadone

A
  • Oral synthetic opioid
  • Longer duration, less euphoria than morphine
  • Used for controlled withdrawal of opioids
    * Milder symptoms that last longer
23
Q

Buprenorphine

A
  • Partial agonist at μ receptor
  • Naïve patient- acts like morphine
  • Users- precipitates withdrawal
    * Major use is in opioid detoxification
    * Shorter and less severe symptoms than methadone
    * Approved for office-based detox
24
Q

Opioid Antagonists

A
  • Bind with high affinity to opioid receptors but do not produce a response
  • Competitive antagonists
  • Rapidly reverse the effects of opioid agonists
25
Q

Naloxone (Narcan)

A
  • Reverse coma and respiratory depression of overdose
    * Within 30 seconds of IV injection
  • Rapidly displaces all receptor-bound opioid molecules
  • Half life: 30-81 minutes
    * Patient may relapse back after this time
26
Q

Naltrexone

A
  • Similar to Naloxone with longer duration of action

* Single oral dose blocks IV heroin for up to 24 hours