Analgesics Flashcards

1
Q

Aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen

A

Indication: anti-inflamatory, analgesia, antipyretic

  • inflammatory conditions
  • oestoarthritis
  • post operative pain
  • menorrhagia
  • low dose asprin for platelt aggregation (COX1)

Class: NSAIDs

Action:
- inhibit COX1 - decrease prostaglandins, prostacylcin, thromboxane synthesis

Adverse effects:
- GI - dyspepsia, nausea, ulceration, bleeding (PGE2 regulates acid secretion in parietal cells, PGI2 maintains blood flow and mucosal repair)
- renal - reversible decreased GFR and renal blood flow (PGE2/PGI2 vasodilation of afferent arteriole), increased blood pressure (PGE2 inhibits sodium absoprtion in the collecting duct)

Warnings:
- GI - IBD, elderly, prolonged use, smoking, alcohol, H.pylori, ulcers
- renal - CKD, heart failure (greater reliance on PGE2 for vasodilation)
- pregnancy - delayed labour and early closure of ductus arterosus

Interactions:
- GI - aspirin, glucocorticoid steroids, anticoagulants (PPI considered)
- renal - ACEi, ARbs, diuretics

Other:
- displace other highly protein bound drugs (sulfonylurea + hypoglycaemia, methotrexate + haeptoxicity, warfarin + increaed bleed risk)

Mneumonic:
Interactions e.g warfarin
Gastric ulceration
Renal impairment
Asthma sensitivity
Bleeding risk

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2
Q

celecoxib, etoricoxib

A

Indication: antiinflammatroy, analgesic, antipyretic
- long term osteo/rheumatoid arthritis

Class: NSAID

Action: selective COX2 inhibitors

Adverse effects:

  • less gi
  • renal - CKD, heart failure (greater reliance on PGE2 for vasodilation)
  • increase MI risk - inhibit PGI2 - unopposed aggregatory effects
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3
Q

Paracetemol

A

Indication: analgesic and antipyretic

Action: COX2 selective inhibtion in CNS - decrease pain signals to higher centres (little anti-inflmatory action as inability to inhibit COX2 in the presence of peroxides in peripheral inflamation)

Adverse effects:
- few ADRs
- no effect on platelets
- limited effect on GI
- well abrobed from GI - inactivated by conjugation in liver

Overdose:
- at normal doses conjugation with glutathione renders NAPQI harmless
- hepatic glutathione is limited
- NAPQI highly nucleophilic - oxidises key enzymes causing necrosis and apoptosis
- asymtomatic initially, nausea + vomiting in 24hr, liver damage 3-4days
- iv acetylcysteine - glutathione thiol replacement (glutathione itself cannot get into hepatocytes)

Other:
Narrow therapeutic window - no. In 24hr (4x day)
Therapeutic index = toxicity

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4
Q

Morphine

A

Indication: opioid
- analgesic

Class: opioid agonist (strong)

Action:
- binds to MOP, DOP, KOP receptor
- decrease cAMP
- efflux of potassium - hyperpolarisation
- decrease substance P and Glutamate release
- increase dopamine release

Absorption:
- PO, IV, IM, SC, PR
- FPM - 40% oral bioavilability
- patches and IV for breakthrough analgesia - 80% bioavailability IV/SC
- 2 mins IV, 15 mins IM, 20 mins oral

Distribution:
- very lipophilic - enters all tissues (including foetal)
- not protien binding so struggles to cross BBB

Adverse effects:
- respiratory depression -decreases sensitivity of MRC to CO2
- GI tract - constipation, vomiting
- sedation + confusion
- puritus
- tolerance and dependence
- histamine release - caution in asthmatics

Other:
- metabolism = morphine + glucoronic acid = M6G + M3G
- elimination = renal
- use oxycodone or fentanyl in renal impairment
- if regular opiates needed prescribe concurrent paracetemol to reduce their requirement
- avoid weak and throng opiates in combo - inhibit same receptors

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5
Q

Fentanyl

A

Indication: opioid

  • analgesic
  • anasethetic

Class: opioid agonist (stronger)

Action:

  • binds to MOP receptor
  • decrease cAMP
  • efflux of potassium - hyperpolarisation
  • decrease substance P and Glutamate release
  • increase dopamine release

Absorption:

  • IV, epidural, inrathecal, nasal
  • 80- 100% oral bioavilability
  • 100x more potent and higher affinity than morphine

Distribution:

  • very lipophilic - enters all tissues (including foetal)
  • high protien binding so crosses BBB

Adverse effects:

  • respiratory depression -decreases sensitivity of MRC to CO2
  • GI tract - constipation, vomiting
  • histamine release - caution in asthmatics
  • LESS than morphine

Other:

  • metabolism = hepatic via CYP3A4
  • elimination = renal
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6
Q

Codeine

A

Indication: opioid

  • analgesic
  • cough depressant

Class: opioid agonist (moderate)

Metabolism:

  • codeine to morphine via CYP2D6 (inhibited by fluoxetine)
  • variable expression of CYP = variable response
  • 1/10th potency of morphine

Action:

  • binds to MOP receptor
  • decrease cAMP
  • efflux of potassium - hyperpolarisation
  • decrease substance P and glutamate release
  • increase dopamine release

Absorption:
- PO, SC

Adverse effects:

  • respiratory depression - worse in children
  • GI tract - constipation

Other:
- elimination = glucoronidation and renal excrection

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7
Q

Buprenorphine

A

Indication: opioid

  • analgesic
  • addiction

Class: opioid partial agonist

Action:

  • binds to MOP receptor - low kd (high affinity), low Emax (effiacy)
  • decrease cAMP
  • efflux of potassium - hyperpolarisation
  • decrease substance P and Glutamate release
  • increase dopamine release
  • antagonist at KOP receptor

Absorption:
- transdermal, buccal, sublingual

Distribution:
- very lipophilic - enters all tissues (including foetal)

Adverse effects:

  • respiratory depression -decreases sensitivity of MRC to CO2
  • low bp, dizziness
  • nausea

Other:

  • metabolism = hepatic via CYP3A4
  • elimination = biliary excretion
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8
Q

Naloxone

A

Indication: opioid

Class: competitive opioid antagonist

Action:

  • greater affinity for MOP than morphine, less than buprenorphine
  • acts at all opioid receptors
  • inhibits normal cascade
  • 0 Emax

Absorption:

  • IV, IM, intranasal, PO
  • FPM - v low oral availability
  • rapid onset of action

Distribution:
- very lipophilic - enters all tissues (including foetal)

Adverse effects:

  • short half life
  • slow infusion

Other:

  • metabolism = hepatic - naloxone -3 - glucuronide
  • elimination = renal
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