Narcotic Pharmacokinetics and Dynamics: The Basis of Infusion Applications

Author:

Stanski D. R.12

Affiliation:

1. Anesthesiology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Palo Alto, California, U.S.A.

2. Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Medicine (Clinical Pharmacology), Stanford University School of Medicine. Staff Anesthesiologist, Anesthesiology Service. Veterans Administration Medical Center. Supported by the National Institute of Aging (RO1-AG-04594, PO1-AG-03104). the Veterans Administration Research Grants, and the Anesthesia/Pharmacology Research Foundation

Abstract

Morphine, pethidine and fentanyl have similar pharmacokinetic profiles with moderately long elimination half-lives (3 to 4 hours), large steady-state volumes of distribution (2 to 4 l/kg), and high hepatic clearances (10 to 20 ml/kg/min). Alfentanil has a shorter terminal elimination half-life (1 1/2 hours) because of a decreased steady-state volume of distribution (0.5 to 1 l/kg). Physicochemical properties and blood: brain tissue solubility can explain the clinical differences in the rate of onset and dissipation of narcotic effect for these four narcotics. Morphine's low lipid solubility and limited rate of blood: brain barrier penetration results in the slow onset and dissipation of narcotic effect relative to pethidine or fentanyl. Alfentanil's lower blood: brain solubility results in the very rapid onset of narcotic effect when compared to fentanyl. All of the narcotics have a very steep blood concentration: narcotic effect curves. Thus, small changes of narcotic blood concentrations can have profound changes of narcotic effect. Finally, different degrees of perioperative stimuli result in different narcotic blood concentration requirements. Thus, narcotic infusion rates need be varied during surgical procedures to adjust for the varying opiate requirement.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

Reference18 articles.

1. EstafanousFG. Opioids in Anesthesia. Butterworth, Boston 1984.

2. StanskiDR, WatkinsWD. Narcotics and naloxone. In: Drug Disposition in Anesthesia. Grune & Stratton, New York 1982; 137–172.

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