Oxycodone has a distinctly different pharmacology from morphine


Autoria(s): Smith, Maree T.; Ross, Fraser B.; Nielsen, Carsten K.; Saini, Kamal
Contribuinte(s)

F. Cervero

K. Breivik

U. Lindblom

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

Oxycodone is a potent opioid agonist that has been in clinical use for many decades. However, it has only recently been appreciated that oxycodone has a distinctly different pharmacology from that of morphine. Importantly, when administered directly into the lateral ventricle of the rat brain, oxycodone produces dose-dependent, naloxone-reversible pain relief in an acute pain model, indicating that oxycodone itself has intrinsic anti-nociceptive effects (Leow & Smith, 1994). However, oxycodone's intrinsic pain-relieving effects are not attenuated by naloxonazine (-selective opioid antagonist) in a dose that completely blocks the anti-nociceptive effects of an equi-analgesic dose of morphine. Furthermore, the anti-nociceptive effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) oxycodone are completely attenuated by nor-binaltorphimine (-selective opioid antagonist) in a dose that has no significant effect on the levels of anti-nociception evoked by an equi-effective dose of morphine (Ross & Smith, 1997).

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:95671

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

W.B. Saunders

Palavras-Chave #Anesthesiology #Clinical Neurology #Neurosciences #EX #111501 Basic Pharmacology #110399 Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Conference Paper