Opioid indications: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 17:02, 18 September 2014
Opioid Microchapters |
Opioid indications On the Web |
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American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Opioid indications |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
Opioids have long been used to treat acute pain (such as post-operative pain). They have also found to be invaluable in palliative care to alleviate the severe, chronic, disabling pain of terminal conditions such as cancer. Contrary to popular belief, high doses are not required to control the pain of advanced or end-stage disease, with the median dose in such patients being only 15mg oral morphine every four hours (90mg/24 hours), i.e. 50% of patients manage on lower doses. In recent years there has been an increased use of opioids in the management of non-malignant chronic pain. This practice has grown from over 30 years and has become a serious problem.
Indications
The sole clinical indications for opioids in the United States, according to Drug Facts and Comparisons, 2005, are
- Analgesia and anesthesia
- Cough (codeine and hydrocodone only)
- Diarrhoea (generally loperamide or diphenoxylate, but laudanum or morphine may be used in some cases of severe diarrheal diseases)
- Anxiety due to shortness of breath (oxymorphone only)
- Detoxification (methadone and buprenorphine only)
In the U.S., doctors virtually never prescribe opioids for psychological relief (with the narrow exception of anxiety due to shortness of breath), despite their extensively reported psychological benefits. There are virtually no exceptions to this practice, even in circumstances where researchers have reported opioids to be especially effective and where the possibility of addiction or diversion is very low—for example, in the treatment of senile dementia, geriatric depression, and psychological distress due to chemotherapy or terminal diagnosis (see Abse; Berridge; Bodkin; Callaway; Emrich; Gold; Gutstein; Mongan; Portenoy; Reynolds; Takano; Verebey; Walsh; Way).