Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of epidural and intrathecal morphine |
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Authors: | B Dahlstr?m |
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Abstract: | Spinal opiate analgesia has opened an exciting new field of research and has also rapidly gained widespread clinical acceptance. This mode of administration has obvious and definite advantages over conventional pain therapy; however, the field is still at an early stage of development. More research is clearly needed to provide methods for coping with some of the drawbacks of this method of pain relief. Important areas for future research include (1) the CSF kinetics of opiates; (2) the physiological mechanisms underlying the rostral spread of drugs within the CSF compartment; (3) a search for safer and more selective drugs; and (4) an evaluation of the extent to which pain-modulating systems at different levels in the CNS can be regulated by opiates and drugs interfering with other neurotransmitters. In this context it is essential to emphasize the importance of simultaneous study of the pharmacokinetics and the pharmacodynamic/clinical effects in providing a rational basis for a better understanding of the mechanisms of actions underlying spinal opiate analgesia. |
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