Drug Classes 2 min de lecture

Opioid Analgesics

Opioids activate mu, kappa, and delta receptors to produce powerful analgesia. Understanding their pharmacology is essential for effective pain management while minimizing addiction and overdose risk.

## Opioid Receptor Pharmacology

Opioids exert their effects primarily through three G-protein coupled receptor types:

- **Mu (MOR)** -- Mediates analgesia, euphoria, respiratory depression, miosis, and constipation. The principal target of most clinical opioids.
- **Kappa (KOR)** -- Produces analgesia and dysphoria. Targeted by some mixed agonist-antagonists (butorphanol, nalbuphine).
- **Delta (DOR)** -- Modulates analgesia and mood. Less exploited therapeutically.

Activation inhibits adenylyl cyclase, opens potassium channels (hyperpolarization), and closes voltage-gated calcium channels (reduced neurotransmitter release), collectively dampening pain signaling.

## Classification

**Full agonists:** Morphine, hydromorphone, oxycodone, hydrocodone, fentanyl, methadone. Produce dose-dependent analgesia and respiratory depression with no ceiling effect.

**Partial agonist:** Buprenorphine -- binds mu receptors with high affinity but partial intrinsic activity, producing a ceiling effect on respiratory depression. Used for opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment and chronic pain (transdermal patches).

**Mixed agonist-antagonist:** Butorphanol, nalbuphine -- mu antagonist/kappa agonist. Useful but precipitate withdrawal in opioid-dependent patients.

**Weak opioids:** Codeine (prodrug, requires CYP2D6 to morphine), tramadol (also inhibits serotonin/norepinephrine reuptake).

## Clinical Uses

- **Acute pain** -- Post-surgical, trauma, acute MI. Short courses (<3-7 days) with multimodal analgesia.
- **Chronic cancer pain** -- WHO analgesic ladder; long-acting formulations for baseline pain with short-acting for breakthrough.
- **Opioid use disorder** -- Methadone and buprenorphine maintenance reduce mortality, overdose, and criminal activity.
- **Cough suppression** -- Codeine and dextromethorphan (non-opioid analgesic but acts at sigma receptors).

## Tolerance, Dependence, and Addiction

**Tolerance** develops to analgesia, euphoria, and sedation but NOT to constipation or miosis. Mechanisms include receptor desensitization and internalization.

**Physical dependence** manifests as withdrawal syndrome upon cessation: lacrimation, rhinorrhea, diarrhea, muscle cramps, anxiety. Unpleasant but not life-threatening (unlike alcohol/benzodiazepine withdrawal).

**Addiction** (opioid use disorder) involves compulsive use despite harm. Genetic, psychological, and social factors contribute beyond pharmacology alone.

## Overdose Management

Opioid overdose presents with the classic triad: respiratory depression, miosis, and decreased consciousness. Naloxone (Narcan) is a competitive mu-receptor antagonist that reverses overdose rapidly. Key points:

- IV/IM onset: 1-2 minutes. Intranasal: 3-5 minutes.
- Duration shorter than most opioids -- repeat dosing or infusion may be necessary.
- Can precipitate acute withdrawal in dependent individuals.

## Key Takeaways

- Prescribe the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration in acute pain.
- Tolerance does not develop to constipation -- always co-prescribe a bowel regimen.
- Buprenorphine and methadone are life-saving treatments for opioid use disorder, not "replacing one addiction with another."
- Naloxone should be co-prescribed with opioids for patients at overdose risk.

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