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Morphine

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Title: Morphine


1
Morphine
2
3D Structure of Morphine
  • The T-shape of this molecule is difficult to
    visualize from the 2D representation
  • http//www.3dchem.com/molecules.asp?ID186

3
Brand Names
  • AstramorphTM PF DuramorphTM InfumorphTM
    KadianTM MS ContinTM MSIRTM Oramorph SRTM
    RMSTM RoxanolTM Roxanol RescudoseTM RoxanolTM
  • EpimorphTM (Canada) Morphine-HPTM (Canada)
    MST-ContinusTM (Mexico) MS-IRTM (Canada)
    StatexTM (Canada)

4
  • Morphine is a highly potent opiate analgesic drug
    and is the principal active agent in opium and
    the prototypical opiate.
  • Like other opioids, e.g. Diamorphine (heroin),
    morphine acts directly on the central nervous
    system (CNS) to relieve pain, and at synapses of
    the nucleus accumbens in particular.
  • Morphine is highly addictive when compared to
    other substances, and tolerance and physical and
    psychological dependences develop very rapidly.

5
Administration of Morphine
  • Parenterally as subcutaneous, intravenous, or
    epidural injections.
  • When injected, particularly intravenously,
    morphine produces an intense contraction
    sensation in the muscles due to histamine release
    and also produces a very intense 'rush' which is
    mediated by several different receptors in the
    CNS.
  • The military sometimes issues morphine loaded in
    an autoinjector.

6
Administration
  • Orally, it comes as an elixir, concentrated
    solution, powder (for compounding) or in tablet
    form.
  • Morphine is rarely supplied in suppository form.
    Due to its poor oral bioavailability, oral
    morphine is only one-sixth to one-third of the
    potency of parenteral morphine.
  • Morphine is available in extended release
    capsules for chronic administration, as well as
    immediate-release formulations.

7
Side Effects
  • Morphine has many side effects. The most
    dangerous is respiratory depression. With higher
    doses or in frail patients, the respiratory rate
    decreases, the patient becomes increasingly
    sedated, and the pupils very small.
  • Common side effects are nausea and vomiting due
    to a central action of morphine stimulating one
    of the centres in the brain concerned with
    vomiting called the chemotactic trigger zone.

8
Side Effects
  • Other central nervous system side effects of
    morphine are cough suppression, sedation, and
    dependence leading to addiction.
  • Morphine also has an effect on the muscle of the
    bowel and urinary tract, causing the sphincter to
    contract and reduce the peristalsis (the wavelike
    movements of the bowel muscle that propel its
    contents forwards). This results in a delayed
    emptying of the stomach, constipation, and may
    also lead to urinary retention.

9
Side Effects
  • Morphine can also cause histamine release, which
    causes itching of the skin and nose and a mild
    flushing of the skin.

10
How do opioid analgesics work?
There are three known types of receptors for
opioid analgesics ?, ?, and ?.
  • http//www.thirteen.org/closetohome/animation/opi-
    anim2-main.html
  • http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_03/i_03_m/i_03
    _m_par/i_03_m_par_heroine.htmldrogues
  • http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/d/d_03/d_03_cr/d_0
    3_cr_que/d_03_cr_que.html

11
Overview Opioid Receptors
  • Opioid receptors are a group of G-protein coupled
    receptors with opioids as ligands.
  • The endogenous opioids are dynorphins,
    enkephalins and endorphins.

12
The mu Receptor
  • The main endogenous ligands for the mu receptor
    are the endorphins, peptides having 31 amino
    acids, with Tyr at the N-terminal end (note that
    the phenolic -OH group of tyrosine resembles that
    of morphine)

13
Tyrosine and Morphine
14
The ? receptor seems to be the major opioid target
  • Activation of the µ receptor by an agonist such
    as morphine causes analgesia, sedation, reduced
    blood pressure, itching, nausea, euphoria,
    decreased respiration, miosis (constricted
    pupils) and decreased bowel motility often
    leading to constipation.
  • Some of these effects, such as sedation, euphoria
    and decreased respiration, tend to disappear with
    continued use as tolerance develops. Analgesia,
    miosis and reduced bowel motility tend to
    persist little tolerance develops to these
    effects.

15
The ? receptor
  • Tolerance develops to different effects at
    different rates largely because these effects are
    caused by activation of different µ-receptor
    subtypes.
  • Stimulation of µ1-receptors blocks pain while
    stimulation of µ2-receptor causes respiratory
    depression and constipation.

16
Overview Opioid Receptors
  • Activation of the d-Opioid receptor produces some
    analgesia, although not as much as activation of
    the mu receptor
  • The natural ligands for this receptor are the
    enkephalins, pentapeptides with the structures
    Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met or Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu
  • There is a recent interest in using delta
    agonists as antidepressants.

17
Overview Opioid Receptors
  • ?-Opioid receptors are also involved with
    analgesia, but activation also produces marked
    nausea and dysphoria (sadness, irritability,
    anxiety)
  • The main endogenous ligands of the k receptor are
    the dynorphins, another class of endogenous
    peptide

18
Heroin
19
Codeine
20
Uses of Codeine
  • Approved indications for codeine include
  • ?Cough, though its efficacy in low dose over the
    counter formulations has been disputed.
  • Diarrhea
  • Moderate to severe pain?Irritable bowel syndrome
  • Codeine is sometimes marketed in combination
    preparations with paracetamol (acetaminophen) as
    co-codamol (best known in North America as
    Tylenol 3), with aspirin as co-codaprin or with
    ibuprofen. These combinations provide greater
    pain relief than either agent (drug synergy see
    synergy).

21
Commercial Products Containing Codeine
22
Codeine
  • Codeine is considered a prodrug, since it is
    metabolised in vivo to the principal active
    analgesic agent morphine. It is, however, less
    potent than morphine since only about 10 of the
    codeine is converted. It also has a
    correspondingly lower dependence-liability than
    morphine.
  • The conversion of codeine to morphine occurs in
    the liver and is catalysed by the cytochrome P450
    enzyme CYP2D6. Approximately 6?10 of the
    Caucasian population have poorly functional
    CYP2D6 and codeine is virtually ineffective for
    analgesia in these patients.

23
Hydrogenation of morphines CC produced
dihydromorphine
Dihydromorphine is slightly stronger than
morphine as an analgesic with a nearly identical
side-effect profile, and is a somewhat more
active euphoriant
24
However, this led to a cmpd with improved activity
Hydromorphone is a drug developed in Germany in
the 1920s and introduced to the mass market
beginning in 1926. It is used to relieve moderate
to severe pain and severe, painful dry coughing.
25
  • Hydromorphone is known by the trade name,
    "Dilaudid.
  • Another extended-release version called
    Hydromorph Contin, manufactured as controlled
    release capsules, continues to be produced.

26
Hydromorphone
  • Compared to morphine and heroin, hydromorphone
    has superior solubility and speed of onset and
    less troublesome side effect and dependence
    liability profile.
  • Many chronic pain patients find that
    hydromorphone has a spectrum of actions which
    suit them just as well as morphine, and better
    than synthetics like methadone or levorphanol in
    alleviating suffering, as contrasted with simple
    pain of equal objective intensity.

27
Similar synthetic manipulations make hydrocodone
more potent than codeine
  • Hydrocodone (marketed as Vicodin, Lortab,
    Dicodin, others)
  • Usually sold mixed with other milder analgesics,
    such as acetaminophen (Tylenol, paracetamol)
  • Such combination products are more effective
    analgesics and also limit the potential for abuse.

28
Oxycodone
29
Oxycodone Uses
  • Percocet tablets (Oxycodone with acetaminophen)
    are routinely prescribed for post-operative pain
    control.
  • Both immediate release oxycodone (OxyNorm in the
    UK) and sustained-release oxycodone (OxyContin in
    the UK) are prescribed for pain due to cancer
    more than for any other condition.

30
Oxycodone Recreational Use
  • Unlike Percocet, whose potential for abuse is
    limited by the presence of acetaminophen
    (paracetamol), OxyContin contains only oxycodone
    and inert filler.
  • Abusers simply crush the tablets, then either
    ingest the resulting powder orally, intranasally,
    via intravenous, intramuscular or subcutaneous
    injection (by dissolving the powder), or rectally
    to achieve rapid absorption into the bloodstream.

31
Oxycodone Recreational Use
  • Injection of OxyContin is particularly dangerous
    since it contains binders which enable the time
    release of the drug.
  • Often mistaken as the time release, the outside
    coating of the pill is merely used as a color
    code for different dosage amounts.
  • The vast majority of OxyContin-related deaths are
    attributed to ingesting substantial quantities of
    oxycodone in combination with another depressant
    of the central nervous system such as alcohol or
    benzodiazepines.

32
Oxymorphone
33
Thebaine
Thebaine (paramorphine) is an opiate alkaloid. A
minor constituent of opium, thebaine is
chemically similar to both morphine and codeine,
but produces stimulatory, with strychnine-like
convulsions, rather than depressant effects.
Thebaine is not used therapeutically, but is
converted industrially into a variety of
compounds including oxycodone, oxymorphone,
nalbuphine, naloxone, naltrexone, buprenorphine
and etorphine. It is controlled in Schedule II of
the Controlled Substances Act as well as under
international law. Thebaine is listed as a Class
A drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 in the
United Kingdom.
34
Changing substitutents on nitrogen can either
improve agonist activityor create antagonists!
Nalorphine , derivative of morphine that acts to
reverse the effects of morphine and other
narcotics . It counteracts narcotic-induced
nervous system and respiratory system depression
but is not effective against depression induced
by other sedatives such as barbiturates .
35
Nalorphine
  • Nalorphine and other narcotic antagonists are
    useful in reversing the effects of narcotic
    overdoses.
  • Because nalorphine causes withdrawal symptoms in
    addicts, it is administered to apparent
    ex-addicts to determine if they have returned to
    drug use.
  • Nalorphine is marketed under the trade name
    Nalline. ?

36
Still more potent antagonists can be made by
incorporating the same structural changes used to
make morphine a more potent analgesic
37
  • Naloxone is a drug used to counter the effects of
    opioid overdose, for example heroin or morphine
    overdose.
  • Naloxone is specifically used to counteract
    life-threatening depression of the central
    nervous system and respiratory system.
  • It is marketed under various trademarks including
    Narcan, Nalone, and Narcanti, and has sometimes
    been mistakenly called "naltrexate." It is not to
    be confused with Naltrexone, another opioid
    receptor antagonist with qualitatively different
    effects.

38
Naltrexone
39
Naltrexone
  • Naltrexone is an opioid receptor antagonist used
    primarily in the management of alcohol dependence
    and opioid dependence.
  • It is marketed in generic form as its
    hydrochloride salt, naltrexone hydrochloride, and
    was formerly marketed using the trade name Revia.
  • In some countries, an extended-release
    formulation is marketed under the trade name
    Vivitrol. It should not be confused with
    naloxone, which is used in emergency cases of
    overdose rather than for longer term dependence
    control.
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