Title: Opiates: History and Treatment Options
1Opiates History and Treatment Options
- West Virginia UniversitySchool of Medicine Ehab
S. Abdallah M.D
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3General Terms
- Narcotics A general term technically referring
to an opiate - related or opiate -derived drugs.
It is often mistakenly used to include several
other illicit drug categories as well. - Opium An analgesic and euphoriant drug acquired
from the dried juice of the opium poppy. - Opiates Any ingredients of opium or chemical
derivatives of these ingredients. Opiate
generally refer to opium, morphine, codeine,
thebaine and Heroin.
4- Synthetic opiates Synthetic drugs unrelated to
morphine that produce opiate like effects. - Codeine One of the three active ingredients in
opium, used primarily to treat coughing. - Morphine One of the three major active
ingredients in opium. - Thebaine One of the three major active
ingredients in opium. - Heroin A chemical derivative of morphine. It
is approximately three times as potent as
morphine and a major drug of abuse
5Opium
Opiates
Morphine
Codeine
Thebaine
Opiate Derivatives
Heroin
Hydromor- phone (Dilaudid)
Oxymorphine (Numorphan)
Oxycodone (Percondan)
Etorphine
Synthetic Opiates
Methadone
Meperidine (Demerol)
Propoxy- phene (Darvon)
LAAM (Orlaam)
6Opium in History
- The source is the opium poppy. Known by its
potential name as papaver somniferum (literally
the poppy that brings sleep.) - Opium is harvested by a small shallow incision in
the capsules allowing a milky white juice to ooze
out. - Opium was first described in specific detail in
the third century B.C. but we can be fairly sure
that it was used for at least a thousand years
before that.
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8- Egyptians were knowledgeable about the medicinal
value of opium evidence of this was found in the
Ebers Papyrus writings. - In the second century A.D., Claudius Galen, the
famous Greek physician and surgeon to Roman
gladiators recommended opium for everything. - Western Europe was introduced to opium in the
eleventh and twelfth centuries from returning
crusaders who learned of it from the Arabs. - In 1520, a physician named Paracelsus introduced
a medicinal drink containing opium, wine and an
assortment of spices. He called the mixture
Laudanum (Derived from Latin meaning something
to be praised) .
9- In 1680, the English physician Thomas Sydenham,
considered the father of clinical medicine,
introduced a highly popular version of an opium
drink called Syndenhams Laudanum. - For the next 200 years or so, the acceptable form
of taking opium among Europeans and Americans
would be in the form of a drink, either
Sydenhams recipe or variations.
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11The Opium War
- Sometime in the eighteenth century, China
invented a novel form of opium use, opium
smoking, which eventually became synonymous in
the Western mind with China itself. - In the eighteenth century the British people had
fallen in love with Chinese tea. - British merchants wanted to buy tea and send it
home, but what could they sell to the Chinese in
exchange? - The problem was that there were few, if any,
commodities that China really wanted from the
outside. - In Chinese eyes, the rest of the world was
populated by barbarians with inferior cultures
offering nothing or little the Chinese people
needed. - The answer was the opium. In 1773 British forces
has conquered Bengal province in India and
suddenly had a monopoly on raw opium. -
- It was now easy to introduce opium to China as a
major item of trade
12- Opium was successfully smuggled into China
through local British and Portuguese merchants,
allowing the British government and its official
trade representative, the East India Company, to
carry off the public image of not being directly
involved in opium trade. - Opium, flooding into the country from its
southern part of Canton, found a ready market,
opium dependence soon became a major Chinese
problem. - Despite repeated efforts by the Chinese emperor
to reduce the use of opium within China or to cut
the supply line from India, the monster
flourished. - By 1839, the tension had reached a peak. In a
historic act of defiance against the European
powers, including Britain, an imperial
commissioner appointed by the Chinese emperor to
deal with the opium problem once and for all
confiscated a huge quantity of opium and burned
it publicly in Canton. - Events escalated shortly after this until open
fighting between Chinese and British soldiers
broke out. The opium war had begun.
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14- By 1842, British artillery and warships had
overwhelmed a nation unprepared to deal with
European firepower. In a humiliating treaty,
China was forced to sign over to Britain the
island of Hong Kong and its harbor (until the
distant year of 1997), granting to British
merchants exclusive trading rights in major
Chinese ports, and pay a large amount of money to
the British losses during the war. - Despite these agreements, fighting broke out
again between 1858 and 1860 this time British
soldiers were joined by the French and Americans. - Finally in a treaty signed in 1860, China was
required to legalize opium within its borders. - The opium war had succeeded in opening up the
gates of China, much against its will, to the
rest of the world. - (The Opium War from the Chinese perspective.)
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16Opium in Britain
- The acceptable form of opium use in Victorian
England was opium drinking in the form of
laudanum. - The Oriental practice of opium smoking was
identified by the British with vice and
degradation and associated with the very lowest
fringes of society. - Opium in the mid-1800s was the aspirin of its
day. There was no negative public opinion and
seldom any trouble with the police.
17- Any opium addict, as long as there were no signs
of opium smoking, was considered no worse than a
drunkard. - Dozens of laudanum based medicines, with
appealing names like - A penny worth of peace
- Mrs. Winslows Soothing Syrup,
- Were used to dull teething pain or colic, or to
keep children quiet. - In 1821, Thomas DeQuincey published his book,
Confessions of an English Opium Eater, that
created a new cultural phenomenon for
recreational opium use.
18Opium in the United States
- Opium consumption in the U.S. paralleled its
widespread use in Britain. - Opium poppies were cultivated in Vermont and New
Hampshire, in Florida and Louisiana, and later in
California and Arizona. - Women outnumbered men in opium use during the
1800s by as much as three to one. - Alcohol drinking was not an acceptable behavior
for females but laudanum was. The consequence
was that husbands drank alcohol in the saloons
wives took opium at home.
19- Opium was advertised as a treatment of alcohol
addiction, white star secret liquor cure was
designed to be added to a gentlemens
after-dinner coffee. - 1850s-1860s
- Thousands of Chinese men and boys were brought to
the West to build the railroads. - Most of the Chinese workers were recruited from
the Canton area where opium traffic was
particularly intense. - The practice of opium smoking was well known to
them.
20- In 1875 San Francisco outlawed opium smoking, a
federal law forbidding opium smoking soon
followed. - The Harrison Act of 1914 required that physicians
registered with the Internal Revenue Service the
opiate drugs that were being prescribed to their
patients and pay a small fee for the right to
prescribe such drugs. - In the 1920s, the U.S. Supreme Court interpreted
the Harrison Act more widely. Under the Courts
new interpretation of the Harrison Act, no
physician was permitted to prescribe opiate drugs
for non-medical use.
21- In 1803, a German clerk named Friedrick Serturner
First isolated a yellowish-white substance in raw
opium turned to be its primary active ingredient.
He called it morphium, later changed to
morphine, in honor of Morpheus, the Greek god of
dreams. - In 1898, heroin was introduced into the market by
the Bayer Company in Germany as a new pain
killer. It is the same company that had been
successful in the development of aspirin.
22Symptoms of administering heroin and of
withdrawing heroin
- Administering
- Lowered body temperature
-
- Decreased blood pressure
- Skin flushed and warm
- Papillary constriction
- Constipation
- Respiratory depression
- Decreased sex drive
- Muscular relaxation
- Nodding, stupor
- Withdrawing
- Elevated body temperature
- Increased blood pressure
- Piloerection (gooseflesh)
- Tearing, runny nose
- Diarrhea
- Yawning, panting, sneezing
- Spontaneous ejaculations and orgasms
- Restlessness, involuntary twitching and kicking
movements - Insomnia
23Street names for narcotic drugs
- Type of Narcotic
- Morphine
- White heroin
- Brown heroin (from Mexico)
- Heroin combined with amphetamines
- Heroin combined with cocaine
- Heroin combined with marijuana
- Heroin combined with cocaine and marijuana
- Heroin combined with cocaine and morphine
- Codeine combined with Doriden (a nonbarbiturate
sedative-hypnotic)
- Street Name
- Big M, Miss Emma, white stuff, M, dope, hocus,
unkie, stuff, morpho - Junk,smack, horse, scag, H, hard stuff, dope,
boy, boot, blow, jolt, spike, slam - Black tar, tootsie roll, chapapote (Spanish for
tar), Mexican mud, peanut butter, poison, black
jack - Bombitas
- Dynamite, speedball, whizbang, goofball
- Atom bomb, A-bomb
- Frisco special, Frisco speedball
- Cotton brothers
- Loads, four doors, hits
24Common Opiate Agents of Abuse
- Generic Name
- Morphine
- Heroin
- Codeine
- Methadone
- Meperidine
- Butorphanol
- Hydromorphone
- Nalbuphine
- Trade Name(s)
- Astromorph, PF, Duramorph, Epimorph, Kadian,
Infumorph 200500, morphitec, M.O.S., MS Contin,
MSIR, OMS Concentrate, Oramorph SR, RMS, Roxanol,
Rescudose, Ultraject - --------
- Codeine
- Dolophine, Methadose
- Demerol, Pathadol, Pethidine
- Stadol
- Dilaudid
- Nubain
- Darvon, Dolene, Novapropoxyn
25- Exogenous opiate drugs act on opiate receptors in
the brain. Researchers theorize that these
opiate receptors exist in order to facilitate the
action of the bodys endogenous opiate like
substances known as endorphine and enkaphalin
(natural morphine). - Exogenous opiate drugs function as agonist to the
brain opiate receptors, turning on the natural
analgesic pathway in the brain and producing the
characteristic analgesia and euphoria sensation
that in susceptible individuals reinforces drugs
and propels the addiction. - Habitual opiate use, while turning on the
pain-suppression pathway, causes the normal
endogenous opiate system to decrease the
production of endorphin and enkephalin.
26- Repetitive use of exogenous opiates also produces
adaptation of the opiate receptors, rendering
them less sensitive to agonist actions. - This Down-Regulation of the receptors requires
larger amounts of the drug to produce similar
effects, a phenomena called tolerance, and
produces withdrawal symptoms when the receptors
are not under agonist effect.
27Treatment Options
- Methadone
- Clonidine (Alpha-adrenergic receptor agonist)
- Ultra rapid detox
- Methadone maintenance
- LAMM (Levo-alpha-acetylmethadol).
28Rapid Detox
- Substance abuse and dependency is a major public
health concern in the United States because of
the economic and human costs. - Current drug abuse treatment approaches,
developed primarily during the 1960s and
1970s, have changed very little since their
inception. The changes that have occurred in
treatment in the last decade have been primarily
structural and have been propelled by the tide of
managed care reforms rather than the emergency of
treatment models.
29- Managed care and cost-containment polices have
affected substance abuse treatment by decreasing
the type and intensity of services, shifting
treatment from in-patient and residential care to
out-patient settings. - Eighty-seven percent of patients are now treated
in out-patient programs (substance abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration, 1996).
30The Development of New Models of Treatment
- Substantive advancements have occurred in our
understanding of the genetic and biochemical
basis of substance abuse and addiction in the
last 10 years. Yet little of this information has
been translated into alternative treatment models
for the addicted patient. -
- Abstinence remains the goal of traditional
addiction treatment. - Sudden cessation of opioid use causes predictable
cascade of symptoms collectively referred as
withdrawal symptoms as previously mentioned.
31- Medically supervised detoxification treatment has
traditionally been seen as the golden standard
and as the logical starting point of treatment. - Traditional detox has involved treatment with
prescription medications, which produces similar
physiological responses, less psycho-activation,
and which can be more precisely regulated and
tapered as the patients metabolism readjusts to
functioning without the addictive drugs. - Traditional detox takes an average of 3 to 15
days, depending on the abused drug. - Medical detox controls but does not eliminate
subjectively uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms.
32- Universally accepted addiction treatment
approaches are beginning to be challenged by the
emergence of innovative treatment approaches
based on the new understanding of the
neurochemistry of addiction. - Rapid detox has emerged as an alternative that is
gaining in both acceptance and popularity,
evidence by recent showcasing in television
episodes of E.R. - Rapid detox is an umbrella term that has come to
represent new treatment approaches specifically
designed to detox patients addicted to natural
and synthetic opiate drugs within hours rather
than the traditional days and to almost
completely eliminate the subject of discomfort of
withdrawal symptoms. - Started in Europe in the late 1980s and brought
to the United States in late 1996.
33Common trade names for rapid detox treatment
programs
- Rapid detox (RO)
- Neuroregulated detox
- Neuro-adaptation treatment
- OADUSA (opioid antagonist agent detox under
sedation or anesthesia) - IND (intensive narcotic detox)
- UROD (Ultra-rapid opiate detox)
- RAND (rapidly accelerated narcotic detox)
- KIYSR (kick in your sleep rapid relief)
34Rapid Detox
- Rapid detox procedures has been done by employing
two novel approaches. - First, general anesthesia is to ensure no
subjective distress is felt. - Second, use of large dosages of opiate antagonist
in order to rapidly and completely remove the
exogenous opiate drugs from the opiate receptors
in the brain. - Because patient can not feel no subjective
distress from withdrawal, detox can be completed
within few hours (4-6) rather than 3 to 15 days
with traditional detox.
35- It is important to differentiate between
- Rapid detox, similar to traditional detox
strategies, but patient receives more sedation
than usual during the withdrawal .sedation is
accomplished through the use of benzodiazepines
and can decrease the time of withdrawal by a day
or two. The sedation is done to minimize the
subjective distress of withdrawal symptoms
allowing detox to progress more rapidly. - Ultra-rapid detox. An approach using general
anesthesia to induce complete unconsciousness,
thus ensure complete comfort during detox.
36Procedures
- Rapid detox programs require either overnight
monitoring or one day program where individuals
checks-in early in the morning and leaves at the
same day. - All programs require pre-evaluation entails drug
history, psychological evaluation, medical
history and current health status evaluation. - Start I.V. and induce general anesthesia.
37- Ultra-rapid detox (UROD) has become potent
protected treatment name however literature still
refer to it as rapid detox.
38- Most programs offering rapid detox require an
anesthesiologist to be present to monitor the
anesthesia and perform the procedure in the
location (hospital) where emergency services are
quickly available should complication arise. - Once general anesthesia has been induced and no
subjective withdrawal discomfort felt by the
patient. opiate receptor blockade is accomplished
with the use of opiate antagonist agents. - Three common opiate antagonists exist
Naltrexone, naloxone and nalmefene. By far
naltrexone is the most widely used opiate
antagonist during rapid detox.
39Comparison of Opiate Antagonist Agents
40- The opiate antagonists have competitive binding
at opiate receptor level, washing out any
exogenous opiates and assisting the receptors to
begin to reestablish normal sensitivity. - The amount of opiate antagonist required and
therefore the length of time anesthesia must be
maintained depends on patient weights and the
duration and intensity of their addictions. - Procedure average time 4-6 hours.
- A short recovery period should follow, including
mild nausea and diarrhea. - The patient is continued on the opiate antagonist
agent, usually Naltrexone, as once a day oral
dosage for 6 to 12 months.
41Treatment Indications
- Addiction to opiate agents
- Motivated for treatment
- No co-morbid health condition
- Failure of past traditional detox programs
- Normal liver function lab values
- Normal thyroid function lab values
- Limited cardiovascular risk factors.
42Treatment contraindications
- Poly-substance abuse to primarily non-opiates
- Little internal motivation
- Medically compromised or unstable
- No attempts at detox
- Liver disease
- Thyroid disease
- Cardiovascular disease.
43Advantages of ultra-rapid detox
- Minimizing the very clinical significant,
subjectively distressing withdrawal symptoms of
opiate addiction. - Rapid detox occurs at the neuroreceptor level and
affords the patient an opportunity to start
intensive follow up immediately while feeling
physically capable to engage in ongoing
treatment.
44- Confidentiality can be facilitated when patients
do not require protracted hospitalization, making
treatment more acceptable to some. - Continuous use of opiate antagonists post detox
affords the patient a measure of protection
against relapse and decreases cravings and
increases the likelihood of successful treatment.
45Intensive follow up counseling is required after
the rapid detox to address needed lifestyle
changes, psychological factors and continued
abstinence.
46Disadvantages of ultra-rapid detox
- Risks related to general anesthesia use the risk
of death associated with general anesthesia is 1
in 250,000 and risk of adverse events rises to 1
in 10,000. - Rapid detox accomplishes medical detox or removal
of the physiological effects of the opiate. It
does little to affect the physiological
withdrawal syndrome, and substantial
psychological support and counseling are required
for the patient to maintain a drug-free
lifestyle.
47- Because rapid detox is considered experimental,
insurance companies do not cover the cost. - Lack of reliable and valid empirical studies
regarding the efficacy of the treatment.