7 Opioids and Antagonists Flashcards
(111 cards)
Opium is from the _________ plant and contains…
Papaver somniferum
10% morphine
0.5% codeine
What are the endogenous opioid peptides?
Enkephalins
Beta-endorphin
Dynorphin
Endogenous opioid peptides are ______ in response to pain
Released —> decreased responsiveness to pain
Derived from opium
Opiate
Having properties similar to drugs derived from opium
Opioid
Term that technically means “sleep inducing” but is commonly taken to mean “opioid”
Narcotic
Endogenous opioids are found in…
Areas of the brain involved in pain and in the reward system
_________ decrease pain transmission in the spinal cord and facilitate dopamine in the reward system, causing euphoria
Beta-endorphins
______ decrease pain transmission in the spinal cord
Enkephalins
_______ bind to kappa receptors, may produce analgesia, but also dysphoria
Dynorphins
What are the three opioid receptors
Mu (µ)
Kappa
Delta
(Sigma is not an opioid receptor, it binds to PCP)
Which opioid receptor does most of the things
Mu
All opioid receptors are coupled to _______ and decrease ________
G-i/o
cAMP
All subtypes of opioid receptors close _____________ on presynaptic nerve terminals
Voltage gated Ca2+ channels —> decreases neurotransmitter release and decreases neuronal activity in these pathways
In addition to closing voltage gated Ca2+ channels, µ receptors…
Open K+ channels, causing hyperpolarization —> inhibition of nerve transmission
Opioid receptor stimulation decreases the release of NTs by…
Inhibiting Ca2+ influx on the presynaptic terminal
Also µ receptors open K+ channels —> hyperpolarization —> harder for neurons to respond to pain signals
Effects of µ receptor stimulation
Analgesia
Euphoria
Sedation
Side effects
Effects of kappa receptor stimulation
Analgesia in some people, dysphoria in others
Effects of delta receptor stimulation
Dysphoria
What are the three ways opioids effect the transmission of pain?
Direct action at inflammed and damaged tissue
Inhibition of release of excitatory transmitters in the dorsal horn (spinal anesthesia)
Thalami action
How do opioids modulate pain
Periaqueductal gray, may cause release of endogenous opioids as well
Rostral ventral medulla
NE pathway from locus coeruleus to dorsal horn may also decrease pain
Inhibition of neurons may increase the activity of pathways that inhibit pain
What is the relationship between opioids and GABA?
GABA normally inhibits descending neuronal pathways that modulate pain
Opioids decrease the release of GABA, allowing the pathways to be activated
This decreases pain transmission in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
Describe the analgesic effects of opioids
Decreases sensation of pain - not numb but they don’t mind it as much
Decreases reaction to pain - relieves SUFFERING from pain
Tolerance develops to the analgesia
What type of pain do opioids not work well for?
Nerve pain
Gabapentin is better