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Morphine: Oleh: Chau Febriani Kharisma 1971002014 Pembimbing: DR. Dr. Gede Budiarta Sp. An, KMN

Morphine is a potent opioid analgesic derived from the opium poppy. It was first isolated in 1806 by Frederich Serturner who named it after the Greek god of dreams, Morpheus. Morphine acts on opioid receptors in the central nervous system and periphery to provide analgesia. Common side effects include sedation, respiratory depression, constipation, nausea, and vomiting. Morphine remains an important analgesic for pain relief but requires careful monitoring and management of side effects.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
104 views51 pages

Morphine: Oleh: Chau Febriani Kharisma 1971002014 Pembimbing: DR. Dr. Gede Budiarta Sp. An, KMN

Morphine is a potent opioid analgesic derived from the opium poppy. It was first isolated in 1806 by Frederich Serturner who named it after the Greek god of dreams, Morpheus. Morphine acts on opioid receptors in the central nervous system and periphery to provide analgesia. Common side effects include sedation, respiratory depression, constipation, nausea, and vomiting. Morphine remains an important analgesic for pain relief but requires careful monitoring and management of side effects.

Uploaded by

Cecilia Mona
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MORPHINE

Oleh:
Chau Febriani Kharisma
1971002014

Pembimbing:
DR. Dr. Gede Budiarta Sp. An, KMN
◦ Opos greek for juice
◦ Opium derived from Greek word opion (“poppy juice”); The opium poppy
(Papaver somniferum)  source of 20 distinct alkaloids
◦ Opiates  drugs derived from opium
◦ Opioid  all exogenous substances, natural and synthetic, that bind specifically to
any of several subpopulations of opioid receptors and produce at least some
agonist (morphine-like) effects
◦ Narcotic derived from Greek word for stupor  refer to potent morphine-like
analgesics with the potential to produce physical dependence
HISTORY
◦ 1806  german youth Frederich Serturner
isolated primary active ingredient in opium
◦ He tested the new drug in his friends at 10
times the modern recommended dose
◦ Active agent was 10x more potent than
opium  He named it morphium after
morpheus (god of dreams)
◦ 3rd century BC : 1st reference of poppy juice
◦ 1527 : Paracelsus formulated laudanum
◦ 1806 : Serturner isolated soporific principle in opium
(alkaloid)
◦ 1817 : isolated alkaloid named morphine
◦ Mid 1800’s : medical use of pure alkaloids began to spread
◦ 1869 : morphine widely used to treat wounded soldiers
during American Civil War
◦ 1939 : meperidine (1st synthetic opioid produced)
◦ 1960 : fentanyl synthetized
◦ 1974-1976 : development of sufentanil and alfentanil
◦ 1991 : remifentanil
◦ Unique in producing analgesia without loss of touch, proprioception, or consciousness
◦ Classification:
A. Interaction with Opioid Receptors
◦ Opioid agonists
◦ Opioid agonist-antagonists
◦ Opioid antagonists
B. Compound
◦ Natural
◦ Semisynthetic
◦ Synthetic
Structure
◦ The active components of opium:
◦ Phenanthrenes
◦ Benzylisoquinolines.
◦ Phenanthrene alkaloids
◦ Morphine
◦ Codeine
◦ Thebaine
◦ Benzylisoquinoline Alkaloids: (lack analgesic activity)
◦ Papaverine
◦ Noscapine
◦ Three rings of phenanthrene core  14 carbon atoms
◦ Chiral molecules, levorotary isomers  biologically active at opioid receptors
Semisynthetic and Synthetic
SEMISYNTHETIC
◦ Simple modification  many derivative compounds with differing properties
◦ Codeine (Methylmorphine)  substitution of a methyl group for the hydroxyl group on carbon
3
◦ Heroin (Diacetylmorphine)  Substitution of acetyl groups on carbons 3 and 6
◦ Hydromorphone  Carbonyl group instead of hydroxyl at position 6 and lacks a double bond
between carbons 7 and 8.
◦ Thebaine  insignificant analgesic activity, precursor for etorphine (analgesic potency > 1.000
times morphine)
SYNTHETIC
◦ Contain phenanthrene nucleus of morphine but are manufactured by synthesis rather than
chemical modification of morphine
Opioid Receptors
◦ Belongs to superfamily of seven transmembrane-segment guanine (G)
protein–coupled receptors that includes muscarinic, adrenergic, and
somatostatin receptors
◦ Three subtypes:
◦ μ (mu – morphine)
◦ δ (delta—isolated from mouse vas deferens)
◦ κ (kappa—ketocyclazocine)
◦ Names  developed from ligands originally found to bind to them or
their tissue of origin
◦ Response of μ opioid receptors to agonists  significantly affected by β-arrestins,
(proteins that regulate the activity of G protein–coupled receptors)
◦ E.g, β-arrestins  promote receptor desensitization (or resensitization) as well as
clathrin-mediated endocytosis.
◦ Pharmacologic modulation of β-arrestin activity  improve efficacy and
tolerability of opioid agonists
◦ κ receptors  less effective analgesia for high-intensity painful stimulation than μ
◦ Opioid agonist-antagonists often act principally on κ receptors
◦ δ receptors  modulate activity of μ receptors
◦ σ receptors (types 1 and 2)  Previously considered opioid
receptors  endoplasmic reticulum-resident protein 
widespread in the CNS and peripheral tissues
◦ Now known not to be true opioid receptors  diverse roles in
intracellular signaling, metabolic regulation, mitochondrial
metabolism, and other functions.
Receptor Location
CNS
◦ Brain : Periaqueductal gray, locus ceruleus, and the rostral ventral medulla
◦ Spinal Cord : Substantia gelatinosa  interneurons and primary afferent neurons in the dorsal
horn
Outside CNS
◦ Sensory Neurons
Intraarticular morphine  analgesia after knee surgery  action on peripheral nerves
◦ Immune Cells
Sites of inflammation  secrete opioid peptides  local analgesia
Endogenous Pain Modulating Mechanism
◦ Existence of opioid receptors and
endogenous opioid agonists 
endogenous pain suppression system
◦ Ideal Opioid  highly specific for
receptors, producing analgesia with
minimal side effects
COMMON SIDE
EFFECTS
CNS
◦ In the absence of hypoventilation  ↓ CBF and possibly ICP
◦ Caution in Head Injury:
1. Associated effect on wakefulness
2. Production of miosis
Excitatory action on the parasympathetic nerve.
Light  excitation Edinger-Westphal nucleus of the oculomotor nerve  constriction
3. Depression of ventilation  hypercarbia  vasodilatation  ↑ICP
4. Impairment of Blood Brain Barrier  ↑ sensitivity
◦ EEG  same with sleep  replacement of rapid α waves by slower δ waves, no seizure activity
◦ Hallucination  auditory, visual or rarely tactile
◦ Clonic skeletal muscle activity (myoclonus) can
resemble grand mal seizure (no changes in EEG)
◦ Skeletal muscle rigidity (thoracic and abdominal)
 chest wall rigidity  large dose, IV of
Fentanyl and its derivatives  Inhibition of
striatal release of γ-aminobutyric acid and
increased dopamine production -- difficult
ventilation
◦ Treatment : NMBA or Opioid antagonist
Sedation
◦ Occurs in 60% patient with titration
◦ Postoperative titration of morphine frequently induces sedation that precedes
the onset of analgesia
Cardiovascular
◦ Morphine (large doses)  supine and normovolemic  unlikely to cause
direct myocardial depression or hypotension
◦ Positional changes  orthostatic hypotension and syncope  morphine-
induced impairment of compensatory sympathetic nervous system responses
◦ Decrease sympathetic nervous system tone to peripheral veins  venous
pooling  ↓ venous return, CO, BP
◦ Drug Induced-Bradycardia  Stimulation of vagal nuclei in medulla 
increased activity over vagal nerves
◦ Direct depressant on SA Node & Slower conduction through AV Node
◦ Histamine Release  Hypotension
Minimized by:
1. Limiting rate of morphine infusion to 5 mg/min intravenously (IV)
2. Maintaining position in supine to slightly head-down position
3. Optimizing intravascular fluid volume.
◦ Pretreatment H1 - and H2 -receptor antagonists  prevent changes in systemic
blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance  NOT alter release of histamine
evoked by morphine
◦ Does not sensitize the heart to catecholamines or predispose to cardiac
dysrhythmias  except in ventilatory depression resulting in hypercarbia or
arterial hypoxemia
◦ Tachycardia or hypertension  painful surgical stimulation not suppessed by
morphine
◦ Combination with IV or inhaled anesthetic  effects does not occur when
either drug is administered alone
◦ morphine or fentanyl with nitrous oxide  cardiovascular depression (decreased cardiac
output and systemic blood pressure plus increased cardiac filling pressures)
◦ opioid and a benzodiazepine  decreases in systemic vascular resistance and systemic
blood pressure
◦ Protect myocardium from ischemia  most prominently through κ receptors
 enhance resistance to oxidative and ischemic stresses
Ventilation
◦ Rapid and persist for several hours
◦ Decrease responsiveness of these ventilation centers to CO2
◦ ↑ resting arterial partial pressure of CO2
◦ Displacement of the carbon dioxide response curve to the right
◦ Suppress pontine and medullary ventilatory centers that regulate the rhythm of
breathing  prolonged pauses between breaths and periodic breathing
◦ Clinically manifest as ↓ frequency of breathing  compensated by ↑ VT
◦ High dose  apnea, patient conscious and able to initiate breath if asked
◦ Dose-dependent depression of ciliary activity in the airways
◦ Direct effect on bronchial smooth muscle + histamine release  ↑ airway
resistance
◦ Analgesic and ventilatory effect of opioid  similar mechanism
◦ Equianalgesic doses ~ ventilatory depression,
Reversal of ventilatory depression ~ reversal analgesia
Biliary Tract
◦ Spasm of biliary smooth muscle  Gallbladder contracts against closed or
narrowed sphincter Oddi  ↑ biliary pressure  colic or epigastric distress
Equal analgesic doses:
Fentanyl, morphine, meperidine, pentazocine = 99%, 53%, 61%, 15%
◦ May be confused with angina
Naloxone relieve biliary spasm not myocardial ischemia
NTG relieve all
◦ Glucagon, 2 mg IV  reverse spasm without antagonizing analgesic effect
GI Tract
◦ Spasm of GIT smooth mucles  constipation, biliary colic, and
delayed gastric emptying.
◦ Morphine:
◦ ↓ propulsive peristaltic contractions of the small and large intestines 
delayed passage
Increased tone at gastroduodenal junction  delayed gastric emptying 
potentially ↑ risk of aspiration or delay absorption of oral drugs
Large intestine  ↑ water absorption  constipation
◦ ↑ tone of the pyloric sphincter, ileocecal valve, and anal sphincter
Nausea and Vomiting
◦ Opioid agonist  partial dopamine agonist at dopamine receptors in
Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone (CTZ) in the floor of the fourth ventricle
◦ Consistent with antiemetic efficacy of butyrophenones and phenothiazines.
Genitourinary System
◦ Increase tone and peristaltic activity of the ureter  Urgency is
produced by opioid-induced augmentation of detrusor muscle tone,
but tone of the urinary sphincter is enhanced  voiding difficult
Cutaneous Changes
◦ Histamine release:
◦ Urticaria and erythema at injection site  DOES NOT represent allergic
reaction
◦ Dilatation of cutaneous blood vessel  warmer and flushed skin of the face,
neck and upper chest
◦ Conjunctival edema and pruritus
Placental Transfer
◦ Opioids can pass through placental barrier  depression of neonatal
ventilation
◦ Morphine > Meperidine
◦ Fentanyl DOES NOT produce significant neonatal depression unless large doses are used
◦ Chronic maternal use  physical dependence
Hormonal Changes
◦ Prolonged therapy  influence hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and the
hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis  endocrine and immune effects
◦ ↑ prolactin
◦ ↓ luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, testosterone, estrogen
◦ Morphine  progressive ↓ in plasma cortisol
Overdose
◦ Principal manifestation  ventilatory depression  ↓ RR, may
progress to apnea
◦ Symmetric and miotic pupils  mydriasis in severe arterial hypoxemia
◦ Flaccid skeletal muscle  upper airway obstruction
◦ Hypotension and seizure  persistence arterial hypoxemia

TRIAD  MIOSIS, HYPOVENTILATION, COMA


Drug Interactions
◦ Ventilatory depression  exaggerated by:
◦ Amphetamines
◦ Phenothiazines
◦ Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
◦ Tricyclic antidepressants
Provocation of Coughing
◦ Preinduction  fentanyl, sufentanil, or alfentanil  significant reflex
coughing
◦ Morphine and hydromorphone  no effect
◦ Exact cause is unclear  imbalance between sympathetic and vagal
innervation of the airways and/or stimulation of juxtacapillary irritant
receptors
Tolerance and Physical Dependence
Tolerance
Development of the requirement for increased doses of opioid to achieve the
same effect previously achieved with a lower dose.
◦ Usually after 2-3 weeks
◦ Analgesic, euphoric, sedative, depression of ventilation, and emetic effects
NOT miosis and bowel motility
Physical dependent (Addiction)
◦ Repeated opioid administration
◦ Can occur after only 48 hours of continuous medication (morfin ~ 25 days)
◦ Depend on agonis effect, less likely with agonist-antagonist
◦ Discontinuation  withdrawal abstinence syndrome
Withdrawal
◦ Peak in 72 hour, decline over 7-10 days
◦ Insomnia and restlessness prominent
◦ Yawning, diaphoresis, lacrimation, or coryza
◦ Abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
◦ Tolerance lost, can be terminated by modest dose  longer period, smaller
dose required
Treatment
◦ Clonidine
◦ Small dose of ketamine
MORPHINE
Pharmakokinetic (ADME)
◦ Oral (capsules, syrups, tablets), IV, IM, Aerosol, Intratecal, Epidural, Subcutaneous
◦ Onset:
◦ IM : 15-30 min , peak 45-90 min
◦ IV : 5-10 min , peak 15-30 min
◦ Only small amount of IV morphine entered CNS (0,1%)
◦ relatively poor lipid solubility,
◦ high degree of ionization at physiologic pH
◦ protein binding
◦ rapid conjugation with glucuronic acid
◦ Alkalinization of blood  enhance passage to CNS  ↑ nonionized fraction
◦ CO2 induced ↑ CBF  ↑ delivery
to the brain  more important than
fraction of drug that exists (either
ionized or nonionized)
◦ Accumulates rapidly in the kidneys,
liver, and skeletal muscles.
◦ Unlike fentanyl, does not undergo
significant first-pass uptake into the
lungs
Metabolism
◦ Primary  conjugation with glucuronic acid in hepatic and extrahepatic sites
(kidneys)
◦ 75-85% : 5-10% (9:1)  morphine-3-glucuronide : morphine-6- glucuronide
◦ Morphine-3-glucuronide inactive. While morphine-6- glucuronide 
analgesia and ventilatory depression (duration of action greater than
morphine, analgesic potency 650x higher)
◦ 5% demethylated to normorphine, small amount to codeine
◦ Metabolite eliminated primarily in urine, 7-10% biliary secretion
◦ Prolong depression of ventilation (< 7 days)  patient with renal failure
◦ Urine  morphine-3-glucuronide detectable up to 72 hours, some unchanged
◦ CAUTION!
◦ Plasma concentrations are higher in the elderly
◦ In the first 4 days of life, the clearance decreased and elimination half-time is prolonged
Sex
◦ May affect, but direction and magnitude depends
◦ Women  greater analgesic potency and slower speed of offset  higher
consumption of postoperative opioid in men
◦ Women  greater respiratory depression
SIDE EFFECTS
◦ Miosis
◦ Orthostatic Hypotension
◦ Respiratory Depression
◦ Pain Suppression or Pruritus
◦ Histamine Release or Hormonal Release
◦ Increased Intracranial Tension
◦ Nausea
◦ Euphoria
◦ Sedation
THANK YOU

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