Opioid Epidemic Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards

1
Q

The action potential generated from painful stimuli is the same from person to person, however what differs is how they…

A

….interpret it

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2
Q

Pathway of pain sensation

A
  • “injury” of some kind (change in homeostasis
  • Reflex arc initiated as well as
  • spinal cord sends message upward
  • thalamus relays message to different systems including limbic (interpretation of sensation), somatosensory cortex (what and where is stimulus) and frontal cortex (applies meaning)
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3
Q

HPA axis chronic activation as a child predisposes to ___ as an adult

A

chronic pain or health issues

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4
Q

Modifiable factors associated with chronic pain (4)

A
  • mental health
  • drugs and alcohol
  • sleep
  • physical activity level
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5
Q

Nonmodifiable factors associated with chronic pain (5)

A
  • age
  • sex
  • culture
  • socioeconomic status
  • genetics
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6
Q

First steps for working with patients with chronic pain

A

Assess for underlying disease thru labs and workups for possible alternatives

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7
Q

CDC guidelines approach to pain management (12)

A
  • Nonpharmacologic and nonopioid treatment first
  • treatment goals set with patient that they won’t be pain free
  • review risks and benefits
  • begin immediate release opioid
  • stay <50 MME a day, if >90 MME need extreme justification
  • acute pain treatment requires 7 days or less of opioids and no more to prevent abuse
  • Chronic pain treatment requires risk benefit eval and tapering
  • frequent evaluation of risk for opioid related harm
  • PDMP review
  • urine drug testing
  • avoid opiates + benzos (synergistic effect exponential)
  • offer or refer for buprenorphine (suboxone) or methadone for those with opiate use disorder (OUD)
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8
Q

NSAIDS + acetaminophen have been proven to be ___ effective as opioids regarding pain reduction

A

just as effective

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9
Q

Pediatric patients should never get ___ products because of ____, preferred agents are ___ and ____

A

codeine, variability of metabolism into morphine in patients causing potentially fatal outcomes, hydrocodone and morphine

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10
Q

Opioid risk assessments

A

Screens used on everyone for risk factors, if positive have to keep patient much more in line

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11
Q

Opioid contracts

A

-Require patients go to a single pharmacy for all meds, can get no prescriptions from other providers, can go to ER treatment of acute pain but can’t be discharged with pain meds, requires random drug screens and pill counts

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12
Q

Complications of chronic opioid use (4)

A
  • constipation (prescribe a laxative with it)
  • allodynia (pain in response to nonpainful stimulation)
  • hyperalgesia (excessive response to pain not related to their original pain)
  • opioid induced androgen deficiency (infertility, decreased sexual function)
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13
Q

Washout period

A

Opiate free period thought to reset receptors and reduces tolerance so pain meds are more effective

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14
Q

If pain is no better after 3 months on opioids, then pain without them will be…

A

….no different - start reducing doses by 10% each week

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15
Q

Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS)

A

Refers to recommendation against withdrawing from drugs such as opioids in pregnancy to ensure better prenatal care in 1st trimester when already at elevated risk, 2nd semester is better to withdrawal but best is to wait until after delivery, child may be delivered in withdrawal depending on mother’s last dose, infant treated with morphine and methadone

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16
Q

Any provider with a DEA license (but no DEA-X license) can prescribe buprenorphine and methadone for pain, but prescribing it for opioid addiction withdrawal if not in a pain management clinic is grounds for…

A

…losing license

17
Q

Addiction definition

A

Treatable chronic medical disease involved in complex interactions among brain circuits (dopamine bursts), genetics, the environment (vietnam vets example), and an individuals life experiences, people with addiction use substances or engage in behaviors that become compulsive and continue despite harmful consequences, argued to be a disease due to a lack of human connection

18
Q

Everyone on chronic opioid pain medicine will become…

A

….addicted

19
Q

Substance abuse disorder diagnostic criteria (only 2 criteria need to be met for mild)

A
  • substance taken in larger amounts than intended
  • persistent desire or can’t cut down
  • time is spent obtaining, using, recovering
  • craving
  • failure to fufill obligations
  • withdrawal
20
Q

Risk factors of addiction development (3)

A
  • family history
  • age of first use
  • history of trauma (adverse childhood experiences)
21
Q

Alternatives to opioids for pain management (3)

A
  • nerve blocks and trigger point injections
  • acupuncture
  • alternative drugs to opioids
22
Q

Converting to morphine miligran equivalents (MME)

A

Take daily dose of med in mg/day, convert using conversion factor to MME, then lower dose by 25% to prevent overshooting mark

23
Q

Narcan (naloxone) reverses ___ overdose and only that

A

opioid

24
Q

Pain intervention below a ___ level is preferred as it limits side effects

A

systemic

25
Q

Hydrocodone (vicodin)

A

A narcotic that is included in acetaminophen or ibuprofen for treatment of moderate to severe pain

26
Q

Oxycodone

A

Most euphoric opioid used for treatment of moderate to severe pain

27
Q

Morphine (immediate release)

A

Less euphoric opioid used for treatment of moderate to severe pain but highly stigmatized making it hard to prescribe

28
Q

Drugs most responsible for overdose death involving opioids

A
  • synthetic (fentanyl, tramadol)
  • Heroin
  • oxycodone
  • hydrocodone
  • RARELY methocodone (not euphoric)