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Collections with the topic tag Morphine
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Morphine is one of the most commonly used opioids worldwide. First isolated in 1803 and commercially marketed by Merck in 1827.
A. Physiochemistry
- Natural phenathrene opioid - plant, animal and even human synthesis identified.
- Synthesized by mammalian cells from dopamine, although exact role unclear.
- pKa - 7.9 (20% nonionised @ 7.4)
- Octanol water coefficient - 1.4 (relatively low lipid solubility compared with other opioids)
- 3 rings attached to piperidine ring with a tertiary amine.
B. Pharmacokinetics
- Dose - 50 mcg/kg IV
- analgesia @ [plasma] 0.05 mcg/mL
- epidural: 10-20 mcg/mL
- PCA adult: 50 mg in 50 mL; 1 mL (1 mg) bolus 5 min lockout, commonly used.
- PCA paeds: 1 mg/kg in 50 mL; 1 mL (20 mcg/kg) bolus; background 0.5-1 mL/h (10-20 mcg/kg/h).
- Absorption - IV, IM, s/c, po (3x dose as HER 0.69)
- Distribution - Vdcc 0.3, Vdss 3.5 L/kg
- Protein binding - 30% (albumin)
- Onset: peak onset at 20 min when given parenteral, 60 min orally; Offset 4 h
- Metabolism - t½α 10-20 min, t½ß 2-4 h
- 75% metabolised by conjugation → 90% morphine-3-glucuronide (no activity)
- 10% morphine-6-gluc (13x potency of morphine). MAOIs inhibit glucuronidation.
- Clearance - 15 mL/kg/min
C. Pharmacodynamics
- Mech - mu, kappa, delta agonist. (GI linked). Effective against visceral, skeletal & joint pain.
- CNS - little CNS penetration (cf. heroin, which readily crosses BBB), although alkalisation (⇣pCO2) ⇡ non-ionised fraction, and ⇡pCO2 ⇡CBF. Both ⇡ cerebral morphine concentration.
- 'Ceiling effect' on EEG reaching high voltage, slow frequency (delta 2-4 Hz) waves.
- ⇣ CMRO2 & ⇣ ICP.
- ⇡ cortical stimulation of Edinger-Westphal nucleus → miosis.
- CVS - ⇣ SNS & ⇡ PNS tone. Bradycardia, venodilation, histamine release (causes ⇣ MAP). Orthostatic hypotension due to depression of SNS responses. Direct depressant effect on SA node, slowing conduction (⇡ VF risk).
- Administration with N2O results in CVS depression.
- Resp - Respiratory depression & response to CO2 & hypoxia (shift pCO2/VA curve to right).
- Bronchoconstriction due to histamine release (similar with pethidine). Depresses airway reflexes & ciliary reflexes.
- Renal - diuresis (kappa receptors → ADH release)
- GIT - Nausea & vomiting due to stimulation of CTZ (30-40% of subjets); ileus; constipation; sphincter of Oddi spasm.
- Pruritus
- Natural phenathrene opioid - plant, animal and even human synthesis identified.
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