Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Opioids were available in clinical practice since before the birth of modern anaesthesia--Setürner isolated morphine in 1806. They have a record of safety which is reflected in their high therapeutic ratios, especially the synthetic opioids introduced recently (table III). The most serious immediate adverse effect, respiratory depression, is a predictable effect related closely to analgesia. It is fortunate for anaesthetists who use opioids regularly, that recognition and treatment of respiratory problems are an integral part of their craft and that opioid antagonists are effective in reversing respiratory depression.
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During a period of one year, 119 patients with chronic pain received injections of opioids via a catheter inserted in the lumbar epidural space. Twenty-three patients (19%) showed evidence of tolerance and were given droperidol 1.25-5.0 mg epidurally. ⋯ One patient given an accidental overdose of droperidol developed reversible Parkinsonism. It is concluded that epidural administration of the dopamine antagonist droperidol may be beneficial as supplementary medication to epidural opioids when tolerance develops.
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Thirty-eight patients maintained on opioid analgesics for non-malignant pain were retrospectively evaluated to determine the indications, course, safety and efficacy of this therapy. Oxycodone was used by 12 patients, methadone by 7, and levorphanol by 5; others were treated with propoxyphene, meperidine, codeine, pentazocine, or some combination of these drugs. Nineteen patients were treated for four or more years at the time of evaluation, while 6 were maintained for more than 7 years. ⋯ No toxicity was reported and management became a problem in only 2 patients, both with a history of prior drug abuse. A critical review of patient characteristics, including data from the 16 Personality Factor Questionnaire in 24 patients, the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory in 23, and detailed psychiatric evaluation in 6, failed to disclose psychological or social variables capable of explaining the success of long-term management. We conclude that opioid maintenance therapy can be a safe, salutary and more humane alternative to the options of surgery or no treatment in those patients with intractable non-malignant pain and no history of drug abuse.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Intravenous dezocine for postoperative pain: a double-blind, placebo-controlled comparison with morphine.
Dezocine, a new mixed agonist-antagonist opioid analgesic, and morphine were compared in a double-blind study in 206 patients with postoperative pain. The analgesic efficacy of single intravenous injections of dezocine (2.5, 5.0, and 10.0 mg), morphine (5.0 mg), and placebo was assessed by verbal and visual scales at regular intervals for six hours after administration. All active treatments provided greater pain relief than placebo. ⋯ All active treatments produced mild to moderate sedation. Side effects were few and mild or moderate with all of the treatments. The physician's and the patients' evaluations favored dezocine in a dose-dependent order, with morphine 5 mg rated lower than dezocine 5 mg and higher than dezocine 2.5 mg.