Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Int Anesthesiol Clin · Jan 1986
Review Comparative StudyEpidural versus intrathecal route of opioid administration.
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Review
Opioid analgesics in anesthesia: with special reference to their use in cardiovascular anesthesia.
In this article, an attempt has been made to review the use of receptor stimulating pure agonist opioids in anesthesia, especially in patients with cardiovascular disease. Particular emphasis has been placed on the use of opioids in high doses to produce anesthesia, techniques that recently have become popular in cardiovascular anesthesia. A major benefit of opioid anesthesia is the cardiovascular stability obtained during induction and throughout operation, even in patients with severely impaired cardiac function. ⋯ The use of very large doses of opioids also will prolong postoperative respiratory depression. High doses of opioids can reduce or prevent the hormonal and metabolic responses to the stress of surgery. However, even very large doses of fentanyl or its newer analogues do not prevent marked increases in plasma catecholamine concentrations in response to cardiopulmonary bypass.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther Toxicol · Jun 1984
Review Comparative StudyEpidural and intrathecal opiates in obstetrics.
The use of epidural and intrathecal opiates in obstetrics is reviewed. Opiate receptors in the substantia gelatinosa of the spinal cord appear to be the main site of drug action after both epidural and intrathecal modes of drug administration. However, an additional systemic effect for this selective spinal analgesia cannot be excluded, especially after epidural drug administration. ⋯ After intrathecal injection of opiates, there was a strong analgesic action during delivery, but an unacceptable amount of side effects prevents their routine use. In post-cesarean patients, epidurally administered opiates are quite effective analgesics, but they still have one serious unwanted effect: respiratory depression of delayed onset. Thus, in routine obstetric practice, epidural or intrathecal opiates play only a limited role.