Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Narcotic analgesics, although frequently used in adult patients, are at present relatively minor drugs in pediatric anesthesia. This review discusses indications, clinical applications, and side effects of opiates for pre-medication, induction and maintenance of anesthesia, and postoperative pain therapy in infants and children. Opiates do not represent the agents at first choice for preoperative anxiolysis or amnesia. ⋯ It has been shown, however, that opiate-supplemented general anesthesia can be used for pediatric surgery in an equally effective and safe manner. Finally, there is an essential need for more narcotic analgesics in the treatment of early postoperative pain, when antipyretic-antiphlogistic analgesics alone prove ineffective. It thus seems that in pediatric anesthesia today opiates are prescribed at the wrong time and withheld when they are most urgently needed.
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Opioids are given for acute intra- and postope-rative pain relief or for chronic cancer pain. In the literature there are only rare and contradictory reports on the oral administration of opioids for chronic non-malignant pain. However, there is no reason to withhold strong analgesics for patients with severe pain. ⋯ Side effects are controlled by additional medication. The principle of opioid administration is prophylaxis of pain -therefore, they should be given "by the clock". Opioids are not only indicated in malignant illness, but also according to severity of pain and by the failure of other measures to control pain.
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Most patients with very advanced cancer suffer from severe pain, and many studies have demonstrated how this pain can be sufficiently controlled. It is of great importance to find out if the findings are also true during the final stage of cancer and how the treatment must be adapted. We therefore examined the methods and efficacy of providing pain relief for dying cancer patients. ⋯ Only 4% of the patients treated in the way described experienced severe pain during the final stage of cancer. Systemic administration of drugs is very effective in relieving pain in dying patients. No signs of tolerance to opioids could be observed, even in patients who had been taking opioids for a longer period of time (average 39 days).
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In this randomized study, the efficacy of i.v. patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) was determined for the opioid piritramide (a pure mu-receptor agonist) and the antipyretic analgesic metamizole (Dipyrone) in three groups of patients following abdominal surgery. The doses of piritramide were 1.5 mg (40 patients) and 3 mg (40 patients) on demand. In addition, we studied the effect of 71 mg metamizole in combination with on-demand boluses of 1.5 mg piritramide in 40 patients. ⋯ The intensity of typical side effects of opioids and antipyretic analgesics (nausea, vomiting, lowering of respiratory frequency, sweating) was low and always easily controlled. The acceptance by patients, nurses, and physicians of PCA was high. PCA with on-demand intravenous injection of the combination of piritramide and metamizole improved the degree of analgesia and concomitantly reduced the opioid dose.
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We reported the requirement of supplemental analgesics following epidural opioids including Opial 5mg and 10mg, and morphine HCl 2.5mg, for 24 hours in postoperative period after surgery of body surface, and lower and upper abdominal surgeries. Incidence of their side effects was also observed. Opial contains 50% morphine HCl and other opioids such as codeine, thebaine, papaverine, and noscapine etc. ⋯ Kinds and doses of opioids used, suggest that epidural administration of other opioids contained in Opial has some analgesic effect. After the surgery of body surface the opioid requirement may be influenced by the intraoperative anesthetic technics and the state of mind of the patient. Urinary retention was the most interesting side effect observed and our data suggest that papaverine contained in Opial may have favorable effect and morphine HCl may have adverse effects regarding its incidence.