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Physiology, Assessment and Pharmacology of Pain 1 Reasons That There is A Lot of Pain in the United States 2 Reasons That There is A Lot of Pain in the United States • Some people feel like you have to suffer with a certain amount of pain, such as in order to go to heaven • Lack of preventative care • Our country does not do a great job dealing with pain because health care practitioners are wary of creating dependence • Health care practitioners do not believe patients’ reports of pain 3 Goal Setting with Pain 4 Goal Setting with Pain • Pain level – Ex. a 3 with rest and a 5 with movement • Functional roles – Ex. be able to walk up stairs, be able to play on the floor with children 5 Pain The Fifth Vital Sign 6 Pain The Fifth Vital Sign •The patient is the expert •The nurse is not a mind-reader •Nursing Implications •Support the patient •Be the squeaky wheel for the patient •Be a patient advocate 7 Pain Facts 8 Pain Facts • Patient is the expert about his/her pain. • All pain is "real" -- even if we do not know the cause. – Cannot correlate imaging with the pain complaint • Pain is NOT a natural outcome of growing old. – Reporting of pain by the elderly may be atypical. • Elderly and children can safely receive opioid analgesics. – High sugar concentration up to two months old serves as an analgesic 9 Scary Facts about Pain 10 Scary Facts about Pain • 89% Americans > 18 suffer from pain each month. • 43% adults (83 million!) report pain frequently affects participation in some activities. • >116 million live with chronic pain and >25 million suffer acute pain resulting from injury or surgery. – This is a conservative estimate • 80% postoperative patients report moderate to severe pain. • 80% of patients believe they must live with their pain. – Many older people think that it is a normal part of aging • 68% of pain sufferers feel anxious, irritable &/or depressed – This may impact their ability to sleep • Sleep may be disrupted because of pain, but the treatment should focus on pain, not on sleep • 12% state their MD never asks them about their pain. 11 Appalling Facts about Pain 12 Appalling Facts about Pain Despite increased knowledge and new technologies that can greatly relieve many pain types, most pain still goes untreated, undertreated or improperly treated. 90% of pain can be treated with very simple tools After more than 20 years research showing ineffective pain management. • MD’s still prescribed 75% of the appropriate opioid analgesic dose. • The prescriber needs to avoid dose ranges because it leaves the nurse to choose the dose • Nurses still administered 66% of the prescribed dose. 13 Barriers to Effective Pain Management 14 Barriers to Effective Pain Management •Lack of understanding of pharmacologics •Inadequate assessment •Inadequate communication •Underutilization of nonpharmacologics •Inadequate use of age-specific data •People respond to different types of medication at different ages •Ex. a nonsteroidal is more dangerous for elderly people than an opioid 15 Pain Etiology 16 Pain Etiology • Disease Related – Chronic pain • Fibromyalgia • Osteoarthritis • Cancer pain • Trauma Related • Treatment Related – Surgery – Chemotherapy and radiation 17 Health Consequences to Not Treating Pain Adequately Things that Increase 18 Health Consequences to Not Treating Pain Adequately Things that Increase Stress Metabolic Rate Blood Clotting Water Retention Hormone Imbalance 19 Health Consequences to Not Treating Pain Adequately Things that Decrease 20 Health Consequences to Not Treating Pain Adequately Things that Decrease Immune System Healing GI Function Mobility Appetite Sleep 21 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Ventilation 22 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Ventilation Splinting and Guarding Altered Respiratory Pattern & Effort Decreased lung capacity V/Q Abnormalities Ineffective Airway Clearance (cough) Shunt V/Q Mismatch Diffusion Defect Retention of Secretions Pneumonia Atelectasis PaO2 Puntillo, 1991 23 Correlation Between Pain and Respiratory Depression 24 Correlation Between Pain and Respiratory Depression • Pulmonary function improves when pain is adequately controlled. • In patients with upper abdominal surgery, vital capacity is increased when pain is relieved. • High pain scores are positively correlated with post-op pulmonary complications. • If respirations decrease to 8-10 respirations per minute, there is a risk of respiratory depression • Pain relief occurs before respiratory depression. – Patients have pain relief and sleepiness before having respiratory depression • Patients develop tolerance to the respiratory depressant effects of narcotics. – Usually develops after about one week 25 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Systemic Perfusion 26 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Systemic Perfusion Pain Vasopressin, Aldosterone, Renin, Angiotensin Fluid Retention by the kidneys Preload Tachycardia 27 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Cardiac Perfusion 28 Pain And Clinical Sequelae Cardiac Perfusion Pain Sympathetic Nervous System Activation Afterload Tachycardia Myocardial Blood flow Myocardial O2 Consumption Myocardial Ischemia Myocardial Infarction 29 Pain and Clinical Sequelae Peripheral Perfusion One 30 Pain and Clinical Sequelae Peripheral Perfusion One Pain Sympathetic Nervous System Activation Vasoconstriction Regional Blood Flow Wound Healing 31 Pain and Clinical Sequelae Peripheral Perfusion One 32 Pain and Clinical Sequelae Peripheral Perfusion One Pain DVT DVT DVT Immobility Venous Stasis Risk of DVT (Deep Venous Thrombosis) http://health.yahoo.com/health/encyclopedia/000156/i8984.html http://health.yahoo.com/health/encyclopedia/000156/i8984.html http://health.yahoo.com/health/encyclopedia/000156/i8984.html 33 A Call to Action!!! 34 A Call to Action !!! - Inadequate pain assessment is the greatest barrier to effective pain management 1. Treat pain as the fifth vital sign. 2. Believe the patient’s self-report of pain. - Listen to what the patient says - Look at the patient as the whole 3. Employ a team approach to pain assessment. - 4. Others who can help the patient - Family can state what is normal for the pain, what the patient can or cannot do - Pharmacists - Physical therapist can talk about progress, baselines, changes in pain with therapy, is the medication appropriate for the therapy - Clinical nurse assistant helps keep the patient clean, assesses pain Conduct ongoing assessments of pain. - Aim to achieve optimum effectiveness of a pain management plan through a concerted effort by patients, their families and caregivers, and healthcare professionals - Must identify new pain and changes in pain 35 Definition of Pain 36 Definition Of Pain • Pain - An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. – Sensory component – physical aspect of pain, what it keeps the patient from doing – Emotional component – tolerance for pain, affects daily life, depression, anxiety, decision about whether or not to tell the health care professional • International Association for the Study of Pain 37 Alternative Definition of Pain 38 Alternative Definition Of Pain Pain is what the patient says it is, when the patient says it is occurring. »Margo McCaffrey, 1989 39 Categories of Pain 40 Categories of Pain • Temporal aspects of pain – Acute pain – Chronic pain – Cancer pain • Physiology of pain – Somatic pain • Cutaneous pain • Deep pain – Visceral pain – Neuropathic pain 41 Pain Descriptions and Consequences Temporal Aspect of Pain 42 Pain Descriptions and Consequences Temporal Aspect of Pain Type Description Consequences Acute Pain Biologically necessary physiologic response that provokes escape/protection reaction (John C. Rawlingson, 1994). • Immediate Onset • Warning: Tissue Injury • Usually Temporary •Escape from Source of Injury •Protection of Injured Site Chronic Pain No useful biological purpose • Less physiologic correlation • The original tissue injury may resolve but the pain lingers so the cause may not be clear • Pain takes on a disease status of its own, requiring its own form of treatment. • Lasts longer than 6 months •The pain lasts longer than expected or warranted for the injury •Mostly due to poorly managed acute pain • Decreased quality of life • Decreased relationships •Decreased mood, leading to increased risk of suicide Can be acute, chronic (persistent – 12/24 hours per day), or a combination of the two •Decreased quality of life •Decreased relationships •Decreased mood, leading 43 to increased risk of suicide Cancer Pain Types of Pain Physiology of Pain 44 Types of Pain Physiology of Pain Type Somatic • Cutaneous • Deep Visceral Neuropathic Source Characteristics Structural tissues: • Bone • Skin • Soft tissue • Joint •Ex. breaking a bone, contusion, arthritis, sprain or strain, pressure ulcer Well-localized • Intermittent or constant • Aching, gnawing, sharp, throbbing , or cramping •Ask about pain, discomfort, soreness, pressure, etc. Deep tissues or organs and surrounding structural tissues Results from stretching, distention or ischemia of tissues Ex. menstrual cramps, liver cancer leads to stretching of the liver capsule (which has nerve endings, even though the liver does not have nerve endings) Deep, boring, diffuse, poorly defined, frequently with referred component Affects the peripheral receptors, afferent fibers, CNS Shooting, burning, stabbing, lancinating (cutting); radicular (nerve root) or radiating pattern Pain from touch (allodynia) - touch ends up in the layer of the spinal cord where pain is perceived Drugs such as non-steroidals and non-opiods will not work 45 Referred Pain 46 Referred Pain Originates at a visceral site but perceived as originating in part of body wall that is innervated by neurons entering the same segment of the nervous system 47 Pain Threshold and Pain Tolerance 48 Pain Threshold and Tolerance Pain Threshold • The point at which a stimulus is perceived as painful. Pain Tolerance • The maximum intensity or duration of pain that a person is willing to endure before the person wants something done about the pain. • This varies according to the person, culture, etc. 49 What is an Important Difference between Acute and Chronic Pain? 50 What is an Important Difference between Acute and Chronic Pain? no or e is m in is pa in C hr on ic pa te cu A ta s. ea .. ve s se r in pa ic hr on .. ... . no t.. e ar s C th w ay 4. pa 3. 25% 25% 25% 25% ai n 2. Pain pathways are not involved in chronic pain Chronic pain serves no biological purpose Acute pain is more easily borne by the patient Chronic pain is not as intense as acute pain P 1. Pain Pathways 52 Pain Pathways • First-order neurons • Second-order neurons • Third-order neurons 53 Pain Pathways First-Order Neurons 54 Pain Pathways First-Order Neurons • Nociceptors sense substances that indicate tissue damage. • Nociceptor sensitivity may be increased by inflammatory mediators – notably prostaglandins, bradykinin, histamine. – Sensitizes the tissue in the area – Sodium rushes in and potassium rushes out, leading to an action potential • Go into the CNS into the dorsal horn 55 Pain Pathways Second-Order Neurons 56 Pain Pathways Second-Order Neurons • Process nociceptive information. • Communicate with various reflex networks and sensory pathways in the spinal cord and travel directly to the thalamus. – Only when the information arrives in the thalamus, does it recognize the information as pain and that it should send it to the cortex 57 Pain Pathways Third-Order Neurons 58 Pain Pathways Third-Order Neurons • Project pain information to the cortex where it is perceived. 59 Ascending Pain Circuitry 60 Ascending Pain Circuitry Peripheral Tissue Damage Spinal Cord Peripheral Tissues Deeper Tissues Spinal Cord Dorsal Root Ganglion Nociceptors Thermal Stimuli Action Potential Chemical Dorsal Horn Mechanical Myelinated A-delta Fiber Unmyelinated C Fiber 61 Action Potentials Kandel, et al, Principles of Neural Science, 4th ed., 2000, McGraw-Hill, p.473. 62 Ascending Pain Circuitry Pain Brain Thalamus Midbrain Brainstem Medulla Spinal Cord 63 Adapted From Basbaum & Fields, 1999 Descending Pain Modulation 64 Descending Pain Modulation Pain Brain Thalamus Midbrain Brainstem Medulla Spinal Cord Adapted From Basbaum & Fields, 1999 Modulation of the Pain Experience 66 Modulation of the Pain Experience - Only recognize pain in the thalamus and then sends it to the cortex - This does not occur with temperature and touch - Somesthetic cortex determines where the pain came from - Pontine noradrenergic neurons can modify or turn on or off pain - Serotonin can turn on (PNS) or off pain (CNS) - At the site of the injury in the periphery, the sodium rushes into the cell - With chronic pain, there is an increase in the sensitivity or uptake of the receptors of the drug - Drugs block the sodium channels - In the dorsal horn, the first-order neurons come in and the calcium voltage channels and a receptor (which one?) have an increase in the receptor - Use drugs that block the calcium channels and receptors - preGABA 67 Modulation of the Pain Experience Endogenous analgesic center in the midbrain Pontine noradrenergic neurons Nucleus raphe magnus in the medulla send inhibitory signals to dorsal horn neurons in the spinal cord Pain signal by prostaglandins Pain signal by endogenous opioids 68 Characteristics of Opioids 69 Characteristics of Opioids - Opioids can work in the periphery, but most of them work in the CNS - Slow the response going up to the brain - Opioids bind presynaptically to halt the secretion of nts, so less information goes up the spinothalamic tract - Then modify the pathway to decrease the pain - Generally opioids make people sleepy, but it can make some people agitated - Generally they make people very happy - Opioids can slow respiration - Ironically they are used to decrease slowed breathing - Opioid intoxication leads to pinpoint pupils 70 Where is Pain Perceived as a Localized Sensation? 71 Where is Pain Perceived as a Localized Sensation? 25% 25% 25% 25% 1. Thalamus - Just knows that it is pain, not touch or temperature 2. Sensory cortex ro n rn ic e rd e oc to N 1s en S eu pt or rt ex co so ry al a Th 3. Nociceptor 4. 1st order neuron m us - Knows where the pain comes from Pain Management and Assessment 73 Patient Impact 74 Patient Impact • Pain management begins with a comprehensive assessment – Should determine the functional status • The impact of pain on a patient’s ability to function • Pain assessment determines the treatment plan • Goals of treatment – Relieve pain – Increase patient’s satisfaction 75 Pain as an Ongoing Process 76 Pain Assessment as an Ongoing Process Assess the patient’s goals Pain should be assessed and documented… • At regular intervals after initiation of the treatment plan. • IV – 15-30 minutes later • Oral – 60 minutes later • With each new report of pain. • Changes in pain patterns or the development of new pain should trigger diagnostic evaluation • Should not be attributed to preexisting causes 77 Pain Assessment 78 Pain Assessment • Unidimensional assessments look at only one element of pain – Ex. a pain scale only looks at pain severity • Multidimensional assessments look at more elements of pain • P = Provokes/Palliates/Previous Treatment • Q = Quality • R = Region/Radiation • S = Severity • T = Time • U = (you) – Associated Symptoms 79 P – Provokes/Palliates/Previous Treatment 80 P – Provokes/Palliates/Previous Treatment • What causes pain? • What makes it better? • From a nondrug perspective • Worse? • What treatments have you tried? • Did the treatments work? 81 Q – Quality of the Pain 82 Q – Quality of the Pain • What does it feel like in your own words? • What words describe the pain? Is it sharp or dull? Stabbing or burning? Crushing? • Try to let patient describe the pain, sometimes they say what they think you would like to hear. 83 R – Region/Radiation 84 R – Region/Radiation • Where is the pain? • Is there more than one site? • Does the pain radiate? • Where does it radiate to? • Did it start elsewhere and now is localized to one spot? 85 S – Severity of the Pain 86 S – Severity of the Pain • How severe is the pain on a scale of 1 - 10? • Other symptoms (nausea, vision changes) • Does the pain affect physical or social functioning? 87 T – Timing of the Pain 88 T – Timing of the Pain • • • • • When did the pain start? How long did it last? Is the pain constant or intermittent? How often does it occur? Has the intensity changed since the pain started? 89 U – (You) Associated Symptoms 90 U – (You) Associated Symptoms • What does the pain keep you from doing? – Sleeping – Eating – Affects my mood – Cannot work – Visit with my family – Knit – Ambulate to the bathroom unassisted • What would you like to be able to do that you cannot do now because of the pain? 91 Measuring Pain Intensity 92 Measuring Pain Intensity A pain scale is useful for grading the intensity of pain. Need to use a validated tool that is easy to use May need to have a translator It should… • • • • Be easy for the patient to use. Correlate with the patient’s cognitive level. Be used consistently across disciplines and at each examination. Take into consideration the following • • • • • Developmental stage Chronological age Functional status Cognitive abilities Emotional status 93 Assessment Tools 94 Assessment Tools Visual Analogue Scale Verbal Numeric Rating Scale Written Numeric Rating Scale Descriptive Pain Intensity Scale None, mild, moderate, severe Faces Intensity Scale Developed for children Used for people who do not speak English Need to know the baseline for the patient McGill Pain Questionnaire Daily Pain Diary Can use a pain notebook Record the best, worst, and the average for every day Write pain rating before taking medication and one hour later 95 Pain Medications 96 Analgesics Nonopioids Opioids 97 WHO Analgesic Ladder 98 WHO Analgesic Ladder Step 1—Mild to moderate pain • Nonopioid analgesic and adjuvant (ex. anti-depressant) • NSAIDS and acetaminophen Step 2—More severe pain • Opioid for mild to moderate pain • Add opioid analgesic, oxycodone, hydrocodone (number one dispensed drug in the country) Step 3—Severe pain • Substitute opioid—morphine, fentanyl • May have a nonopioid and an adjuvant 99 p. Lehne, 2007, Pharmacology for Nursing Care, 6th ed., Elsevier, 286 Dosing Schedules for Pain 100 Dosing Schedules for Pain Lehne, 2007, Pharmacology for Nursing Care, 6th ed., Elsevier, p. 271 101 Nonopioids 102 Nonopioids • Topical • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) • Para-aminophenol derivatives 103 Nonopioids Topical 104 Nonopioids Topical • Capsaicin (hot chili peppers): – Secretes and eventually depletes Substance P – Takes 2 weeks to work – Can cause skin irritation • Need to wash hands after use because it will burn 105 Nonopioids Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) 106 Nonopioids Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) inhibit prostaglandin synthesis and decrease the sensitivity of the nociceptor. – Topical • Flexor patch • Gel • Drops – Systemic • Works locally to treat the pain and also works in the CNS • Aspirin • Ibuprofen and others 107 Nonopioids Para-aminophenol Derivatives 108 Nonopioids Para-aminophenol Derivatives Para-aminophenol derivatives (Acetaminophen) – Used alone and in combination with other drugs – Do not use acetaminiophen in someone who has liver damage or who is an alcoholic 109 Opioids 110 Opioids Narcotic once referred to opium derivatives. Narcotic is a value-laden word that should not be used with patients—use opioid instead. Opioids work primarily in the CNS: forebrain, brainstem, spinal cord. Alters the perception of pain Opioids bind to a transmembrane receptor (mu,kappa). NH2 NH2 COOH COOH Effect 111 Opioid Drugs Mechanism of Action 112 Opioid Drugs Mechanism of Action Act at the Opioid Receptors (mu,kappa) in CNS. Simulate Endogenous Opioids. • Endorphin – Mu • The winner • Leads to sedation • Enkephalin - Kappa • Dynorphin – Delta • Not sure what delta does Most Potent Analgesic Compounds. 113 Opioid Drugs Side Effects 114 Opioid Drugs Side Effects • The side effects are mediated by peripheral opioid receptors located in the organs that are affected, not by receptors in the CNS. • Sedation • Respiratory Depression • Constipation • When the opioid hits opioid receptors in the gut, it slows peristalsis • People have dies from fecal impaction • Should also prescribe a stool softener • Urinary Retention • Orthostatic Hypotension • Nausea/Emesis 115 Responses to Activation of Mu and Kappa Receptors 116 Responses to Activation of Mu and Kappa Receptors Receptor Type Response Analgesia Mu Kappa X X Respiratory depression X Sedation X Euphoria X Physical dependence X Decreased GI motility due to slowed peristalsis X Lehne, 2007, Pharmacology for Nursing Care, 6th ed., Elsevier, p. 259 X X 117 Tolerance, Dependence, and Addiction 118 Tolerance, Dependence, and Addiction • Tolerance - physiological process of desensitization of receptors need dose increase to achieve same degree of analgesia. • Physical dependence – when the drug is stopped suddenly, the patient feels negative effects • Addiction – drug use despite harm – Psychosocial in nature 119 Routes of Administration 120 Routes of Administration Intravenous Intramuscular Oral Try to use it if the person is not in a crisis • Unmodified (short-acting) • Extended release/long-acting Transmucosal Sublingual, Buccal Rectal Transdermal 121 Oral Route 122 Oral Route Simplest and least invasive route Minimizes burden of caregivers Immediate- and controlled-release forms are available Side effects may limit the usefulness: • Nausea and vomiting • Decreased GI function 123 Rectal Route 124 Rectal Route Easy to use alternative to PO. Most useful in short-term and end-of-life care. Need a suppository Do not use an oral medication Unacceptable to some patients and family Aesthetics Rectal irritation Inability to retain medication Inferior and middle rectal veins empty into vena cava. Avoids first pass effect Superior rectal vein empties into portal vein. Insert rectal doses just above anal sphincter Interference with absorption. Mechanical (e.g. feces) Inappropriate vehicles Spontaneous expulsion (>10-25 ml) 125 Transdermal Route 126 Transdermal Route Encourages compliance Long-acting (every 3 or 7 days) Disadvantages Toxicity may continue after removal Release rate may vary with fever Results may vary in cachectic (wasted) patients Expensive Slow process Best for people who have constant pain Difficult-impossible to titrate Slow onset Long time to steady state serum levels Dose conversion problems Fentanyl/buprenorphine Fentanyl is an every three day patch 127 Sublingual and Buccal Routes (Transmucosal) Advantages 128 Sublingual and Buccal Routes (Transmucosal) Advantages • Avoids first pass • Less costly than parenteral • Comfort for patient • Effective in 15-25 minutes 129 Sublingual and Buccal Routes (Transmucosal) Disadvantages 130 Sublingual and Buccal Routes (Transmucosal) Disadvantages • Low Bioavailability – Bioavailability – how much drug reaches the site of action • Taste • Inconvenient with large doses • No fluids for ≈ 15 min after dose 131 Opioid Prototypes 132 Opioid Prototypes Class Prototype Agonist - Bind to Mu receptor Morphine Sulfate, dilaudin, methadone Agonist/Antagonist - Stimulate some receptors, like Mu, but block other receptors Pentazocine Opioid antagonist -Bind to the Mu receptor and block it -Competitively compete with the receptor Naloxone 133 Morphine: Pharmacokinetics 134 Morphine: Pharmacokinetics Absorption IM, SC, IV (PCA): Rapid PO: Large 1st Pass effect Pregnancy Risk C Metabolism/ Excretion Liver and Gut Mucosa - Deals with the P450 cytochrome system Urine and Breast milk (wait 6 hours) Onset PO: Variable Studies have’ shown that the drug exerts animal teratogenic or embryocidal effects, but there are no controlled studies in women, or no studies are available in either animals or women. [Immediate Release (IR); Sustained Release (SR)] IV: Rapid Peak PO: 1-2h IV: 20 min Duration 4-8 h - Normally about 4 hours Dose Max dose Varies with need and tolerance - Start low, with about 5 mg No ceiling (limit) with progressive dosing 135 Fentanyl: Pharmacokinetics 136 Fentanyl: Pharmacokinetics Absorption Transdermal patch; Transmucosal (SL or buccal lozenge, tablet, film) IV: anesthesia use mainly Pregnancy Risk C Metabolism/ Excretion Liver/kidney -Metabolized to inactive drug products, which are not working and thus are not toxic - better for someone with end stage renal disease Urine Onset Transdermal / buccal: gradual Peak Variable: Based on rate of absorption Duration 48-72h Dose Max dose 12-100 mcg/hour with escalating doses (multiple patches) – max 300 mcg/hour - Cannot go from having no opioids to having a fentanyl patch Studies have’ shown that the drug exerts animal teratogenic or embryocidal effects, but there are no controlled studies in women, or no studies are available in either animals or women. 137 Fentanyl Patch Administration and Disposal 138 Fentanyl Patch Administration and Disposal • Wear gloves • Apply to non-irritated skin • No soaps/creams/ lotions that can irritate/ change skin condition • Replace every 72 hr to new site • Fold and flush old patch – To dispose it, should follow the package labeling 139 Oxycodone: Pharmacokinetics 140 Oxycodone: Pharmacokinetics Absorption PO: IR, SR (OxyContin-only long-lasting oral oxycodone) Pregnancy Risk B D Animal studies do not indicate a risk to the fetus and there are no controlled human studies, or animal studies do show an adverse effect on the fetus but well-controlled studies in pregnant women have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus. Positive evidence of human fetal risk exists, but benefits in certain situations (e.g., life threatening situations or serious diseases for which safer drugs cannot be used or are ineffective) may make use of the drug acceptable despite its risks. Metabolism/ Excretion Liver Urine T ½: 2-3h Onset 15-30 min Peak 1-1.5h Duration 3-6h Dose Max dose •Alone-no ceiling (limit) with progressive dosing. •With ASA/acetaminophen 325/500 mg (Percodan / Percocet): dose limited by ASA/acetaminophen. •maximum dose of percocet is limited by the 4 grams of acetimenophen 141 OxyContin 142 OxyContin Convenient 12 hour dosing Available in multiple strengths: 10 - 80 mg Schedule II opioid, by prescription only One prescription only with no refills Tablets MUST be taken whole, not crushed, broken, or chewed Extended release drug Contraindications similar to other opioids 143 Pentazocine 144 Pentazocine Absorption PO: Large First Pass Effect SQ, IM Pregnancy Risk C Studies have’ shown that the drug exerts animal teratogenic or embryocidal effects, but there are no controlled studies in women, or no studies are available in either animals or women. Metabolism/ Excretion Liver Urine MOA Agonist: Kappa Antagonist: Mu - Tries to limit respiratory depression Tablets contain naloxone to prevent abuse by IV injection—naloxone is destroyed on 1st pass Special notes IV: ICP Pts taking other opioids: Reverses Mu opioid pain May precipitate withdrawal 145 Naloxone 146 Naloxone Class Pure Opioid Antagonist Therapeutic use Respiratory depression following narcotic overdose. Pregnancy Risk B caution with lactation MOA Reverses effect byfetus competing receptor Animal studiesnarcotic do not indicate a risk to the and there are at no controlled human sites. studies, or Onset IV: 1-2 minutes Duration 1-4 hours Note Duration of narcotic usually > naloxone - May have to give a repeat dose to prevent overdosing on the opioids animal studies do show an adverse effect on the fetus but well-controlled studies in pregnant women have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus. 147 Equianalgesic Opioid Dosing 148 Equianalgesic Opioid Dosing • The idea is that the effects of the medications in the table are all equal • Gets at the potency issue – Need more of certain drugs in order to have the same effect 149 Equianalgesic Opioid Dosing Drug Equianalgesic Dose (mg) Parenteral Oral Morphine 10 30 Buprenorphine 0.3 0.4 (sl) Codeine 100 200 Fentanyl 0.1 NA Hydrocodone NA 30 Hydromorphone 1.5 7.5 Meperidine 100 300 Oxycodone 10* 20 1 10 100* 120 Oxymorphone Tramadol *Not available in the US McPherson ML. Demystifying Opioid Conversion Calculations: A Guide For Effective Dosing. Amer Soc of Health-Systems Pharm, Bethesda, MD, 2010. Copyright ASHP, 2010. Used with permission. NOTE: Learner is STRONGLY encouraged to access original work to review all caveats and explanations pertaining to this chart. Evaluating Opioid Effects 151 Evaluating Opioid Effects Pain Rating (at rest and with movement) Patient pain goal Respiratory rate: must be at least 10/min Sedation Score 0 None 1 Mild, occasionally drowsy, easy to arouse 2 Moderate, frequently drowsy, easy to arouse 3 Severe, somnolent, difficult to arouse S Sleep, normal sleep, easy to arouse The most that you want someone to be if you are giving an opioid is a two Adverse Effects/Management of adverse effects Respiratory depression, sedation, constipation nausea/vomiting, itching Patient Satisfaction with pain management 152 Opioids Managing Adverse Effects 153 Opioids Managing Adverse Effects Adverse Reaction Drug/dose Sedation/Respiratory Depression • Naloxone • Monitor pt continually Nausea/Vomiting Antiemetics (to be covered in GI) Itching •Switch to a new opioid (esp. if on morphine) •Diphenhydramine 25-50 mg IV/po q6h •Local application of ice to any place on body •Can give histamine Constipation •Bowel protocols: softeners + peristaltic stimulators + fluids + mobility •Start protocol as soon as taking PO •Methylnaltrexone 154 Opioid Overdose 155 Opioid Overdose Assessment Intervention Respirations <10 •Initial dose 0.4-2mg naloxone IV •Repeat q 2-3 min if no respiratory response •If no effect after 10 mg, consider other causes of respiratory decrease •Airway/Life support as needed •Vasopressors •Life support Severe Hypotension 156 Oxycodone Preparations Percocet and Percodan Have Which of the Following Problems? 157 Oxycodone Preparations Percocet and Percodan Have Which of the Following Problems? A ce Th ey n he ta m in op ar e an d en ex p ry ve no t ar e ey Th ... ... ef fe ... io av rb po o e ha v ey si ve 25% 25% 25% 25% Th 1. They have poor bioavailability 2. They are not very effective 3. They are expensive 4. Acetaminophen and aspirin in the tablet limit the dose When Administering Naloxone for Opioid Overdose, Which of the Following Must We Remember? 159 When Administering Naloxone for Opioid Overdose, Which of the Following Must We Remember? sh It ha s a es ca us It ... or t ha us ea na or al is It lflif e ac ly pe n ex s It i an d. .. tiv si ve 1. It is expensive 2. It is orally active 3. It causes nausea and vomiting 4. It has a short halflife compared with most opioids e 25% 25% 25% 25% Opioid Administration by PCA Pump 161 Opioid Administration by PCA Pump Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) 162 Components of PCA 163 Components of PCA • PCA device • The drug 164 Components of PCA PCA Device 165 Components of PCA PCA Device • The PCA device: An electronically controlled infusion pump that delivers a preset IV bolus of opioid analgesic when the patient pushes a button. – The prescriber decides how much drug the patient will get when he or she hits the button • The device will only deliver the bolus if an appropriate interval (the lock-out interval) has elapsed since the last bolus. • Some devices will deliver a basal infusion with the patientcontrolled bolus delivered on top of the basal rate. 166 Components of PCA The Drug 167 Components of PCA The Drug • Pure opioid agonists are used, most frequently morphine, but sometimes others (fentanyl, methadone, hydromorphone). • Agonist-antagonists can also be used. 168 PCA Decision Algorithm 169 PCA Decision Algorithm No Pain goal met/Pt satisfied? Yes Continue Plan # attempts/ # injections (doses) Pt receiving max dose/hr? No Terms: Dose: Amount/ “click” Delay/lockout: Time between doses Dose/hour Yes Call MD Assess reasons for not using + Pt education Re-evaluate 170 Nursing Process for Opioid Administration 171 Nursing Process for Opioid Administration Assessment • Sudden pain post invasive procedure • Check VS before giving med Nsg diagnoses • Pain due to incomplete management • Risk injury due to adverse effects • Constipation due to opioid meds Planning/Intervention: • As previously discussed Max. therapeutic • Do not give agonist/antagonist if effects started opioid Planning/Intervention Minimize adverse effects • Give PO with food due to nausea and vomiting • Mobility to prevent paralytic ileus (absence of peristalsis) • Encourage deep breathing & coughing post operatively 172 Pharmacological Interventions 173 Pharmacological Interventions Right dose provides effective analgesia with minimal side effects. By the ladder, by the clock, by the least invasive route. Titrate (Evaluate effect & change med/dose) to effective pain control. PRN 174 Opioids Patient and Family Education 175 Opioids Patient and Family Education • Drug information • Do not ever let a family member do proxy dosing – The patient needs to be alert enough and under control enough in order to push the button • Assess ability to safely self-medicate post discharge • Avoid alcohol and other CNS depressants • Long term use (3 months) require gradual dose reduction to avoid withdrawal • Environmental and lifestyle safety • Wear a medical alert device 176 Opioids Fears and Misconceptions 177 Opioids Fears and Misconceptions • RESPIRATORY DEPRESSION – Do get some tolerance after about one week but need to be careful of tolerance • DEPENDENCE • TOLERANCE • ADDICTION – Continued use despite harm 178 Addiction vs. Effective Pain Management 179 Addiction vs. Effective Pain Management Addiction is a psychological process related to craving, obtaining and compulsive use of substance for "mood altering“ effect regardless of negative physical, legal and social consequences – If function/relationships deteriorate, this is a sign of addiction Effective Pain Management: – If function/relationships improve this is a sign of effective pain management Contributing Reinforcer: – Pain is a reinforcer in Pain Management – Discomfort of withdrawal is a reinforcer in Addiction 180 Opioid Administration Legal Aspects 181 Opioid Administration Legal Aspects • Accurate documentation of drug & dose given; wasted drug witnessed. • Narcotic count accurate. 182 Nonopioid Adjuvants 183 Nonopioid Adjuvants • Tricyclic antidepressants Block Noradrenaline and serotonin reuptake decreased Substance P release • Anticonvulsants decrease nerve conduction • Steroids Stabilize mast cells decrease histamine and decrease swelling 184 Nonpharmacologic Strategies Cortex-Focused 185 Nonpharmacologic Strategies Cortex-Focused • Relaxation • Distraction • Imagery • Music 186 Nonpharmacologic Strategies Local/Regional 187 Nonpharmacologic Strategies Local/Regional • • • • Touch: Human Connection Energy therapy Heat (increase circulation) Cold (decrease swelling and nerve excitation) • Massage • Acupuncture • Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) 188 Placebos and the Placebo Effect 189 Placebos and the Placebo Effect Placebos Inactive or partial dose products Deception involved (OK for research with informed consent) The "Placebo Effect”: achieve therapeutic result with administration of a placebo BUT the Nurse-Patient relationship is built on honesty and trust. Therefore the administration of placebos to deceive a patient is UNETHICAL !!!! (American Society of Pain Management Nurses) 190 Patient Education 191 Patient Education DO NOT CHASE PAIN !!! Do not wait to see how the pain develops Teach pt how to use Pain Scale!!! Anticipate fear/reluctance to take opioids. • Establish pain rating to ask for pain med/press PatientControlled Anesthesia (PCA). • No need to “save” meds until pain gets worse. 192 Evaluation Outcomes 193 Evaluation Outcomes Patient sets pain rating goal—usually <3 at rest, 6 with movement. Engages in ADL’s as possible. Self-medicates appropriately to attain goal. Maximum pain relief with minimal side effects. Able to focus attention away from pain. 194 Things to Look Up or Ask • Slides 60-63 – ascending pain circuitry • Slides 64-65 – descending pain modulation • Slides 66-68 – modulation of the pain experience • Slide 154 – is there still constipation if you take opiods IV rather than oral? 195