Physiological analgesia and analgesic drugs Flashcards

1
Q

What are opiates?

A

Substances extracted from opium (or similar structures)

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2
Q

What are opioids?

A

Any agent that act upon opioid receptors

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3
Q

What are the 5 ways that analgesia may reduce nocioception and pain?

A

1- Acting at the site of injury (decrease nociceptor sensitisation in inflammation)- e.g. NSAIDS
2-Blocking nerve conduction e.g. local anaesthetics
3-Suppressing transmission of nociceptive signals in the dorsal horn of the signal cord e.g. opioids, some anti-depressants
4-Activating (or potentiating) descending inhibitory controls e.g. opioids
5- Target ion channels unregulated in nerve damage e.g. antiepileptics

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4
Q

Perception of pain is highly variable, for the same degree of nociceptive activity, depending on the level on concurrent innocuous sensory input and behavioural context more or less pain may be perceived

A
Thanks for turning this card over
Because it wasn't a question really was it?
Well it's true anyway
Go get a snack and rehydrate
Keep going
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5
Q

Pain can be reduced by simultaneous excitation of low threshold mechanoreceptors. What type of fibres are these?

A

LTMs

Ab-fibres

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6
Q

TRUE/FALSE

All sensory afferents are inhibitory

A

FALSE

they are all excitatory

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7
Q

When the periaqueductal grey (PAG) is excited what happens?

A

Descending inhibition of nociceptive transmission in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord

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8
Q

What is opiod action mediated by?

A

G protein coupled opiod receptors

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9
Q

What opiod receptors are responsible for the analgesic actions of opioids?

A

u

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10
Q

What opiod receptors contribute to analgesia but activation can be proconvulsant?

A

d

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11
Q

What opiod receptor continbcute to analgesia at the spinal and peripheral level and activation is associated with sedation, dysphoria and hallucinations

A

K

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12
Q

What are the major adverse effects of opioids?

A

Apnoea

Orthostatic hypotension

Nausea, Vomiting, Constipation, increased intrabiliary pressure

Confusion, euphoria, dysphoria, hallucinations, dizziness, myoclonus, hyperalgesia (with excessive use)

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13
Q

What is the mechanism by which opioids trigger bronchospasm in asthmatics?

A

Mast cell degranulation.

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14
Q

Are most opioids agonists or antagonists?

A

Most are agonists

the ones that are antagonists are naloxone, naltrexone, alvimopan and methylnaltrexone

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15
Q

What is morphine metabolised by?

A

Liver

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16
Q

Heroin is more lipophilic than morphine TRUE/FALSE

A

TRUE

17
Q

Why should pethidine not be used in conjunction with MAO inhibitors?

A

Excitement
Convulsions
Hyperthermia

18
Q

TRUE/FALSE Tramadol is a weak u-receptor agonist

A

TRUE

19
Q

What is used to assist with withdrawal from strong opioids?

A

Methodone

20
Q

What is used to reverse opiod toxicity?

A

Naloxone

21
Q

What opiod drug is sometimes used in labour?

A

Pethidine

22
Q

NSAIDs reduce nocioceptor sensitisation TRUE/FALSE

A

TRUE

23
Q

What is the difference between COX 1 and COX 2?

A

COX-1 is constitutively active

COX-2 is induced locally at sites of inflammation

24
Q

What do COX do?

A

Suppress the decrease in activation threshold
Decrease recruitment of leukocytes that produce the inflammatory mediators
Suppress the production of pain-producing prostaglandins

25
Q

Why is paracetamol not classed as an NSAID?

A

Lack anti-inflammatory activity and acts only centrally

26
Q

Why are selective COX-2 inhibitors not used?

A

They are prothrombotic

27
Q

Name 4 conditions where neuropathic pain occurs

A

Trigeminal neuralgia
Diabetic neuropathy
Post-herpetic neuralgia
Phantom limb pain

28
Q

Which opiod is used in migraine prophylaxis?

A

Gabapentin

29
Q

Which opiod is used in painful diabetic neuropathy?

A

Pregabalin

30
Q

How does amitriptyline work?

A

Acts centrally by decreasing the reuptake of noradrenaline and serotonin

31
Q

How does duloxetine work?

A

Decreased reuptake of noradrenaline and serotonin