Tag: morphine

Intraosseous Morphine Reduces Pain after Knee Replacement Surgery

Knee pain
Source: CC0

In knee replacement patients, injecting a combination of morphine and the antibiotic vancomycin into the tibia of their knee joint resulted in less pain post-surgery compared to those who received the infusion without morphine during surgery. The findings were published in The Journal of Arthroplasty.

“Despite many technological advances, controlling pain after total knee arthroplasty can be challenging; most patients experience considerable pain and discomfort, especially in the first couple of weeks into their recovery,” explained Kwan “Kevin” Park, MD, orthopaedic surgeon at Houston Methodist. “Intraosseous infusion, which involves injecting medication directly into the bone marrow, allows us to control pain pre-emptively so that patients don’t have to take as much pain medicine later on.”

Total knee replacement is the recommended treatment to alleviate chronic pain caused by damage to the knee joint from arthritis or injury.

Despite the high frequency and favourable outcomes of the surgical procedure, the manipulation of soft tissue and resurfacing damaged bones during knee replacement cause pain in the early postoperative periods.

“Twenty years ago, patients would remain in the hospital for several days after their surgery and receive extremely high-dose narcotics to help with their postoperative pain,” Dr Park said. “But there has been a paradigm shift; patients are often discharged the same day after knee replacement surgery, and we use multimodal pain management techniques that work much better for pain control and require fewer narcotics.”

These multimodal regimens, he added, often include a combination of medications, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, opioids and neurogenic agents that act on the nervous system, administered both pre-emptively and after the surgery. However, opioid medications, although very effective in managing pain, have known side effects, like constipation and nausea, and some individuals are allergic to opiates. Opioid medication can be highly addictive, as well. Furthermore, a consensus on the optimal preoperative protocol to mitigate pain is lacking.

Previously, the researchers demonstrated that injecting the antibiotic vancomycin directly into the tibia before surgery helped in reducing infection by reaching a higher concentration of the drug in the knee. Motivated by this success, they investigated whether adding morphine into the tibial bone with a standard antibiotic solution could improve postoperative pain management.

For the study, the team included 48 patients needing total knee replacement surgery. Of these patients, half were randomised to receive vancomycin and morphine injected directly into the bone marrow, using an infusion device that was inserted into the tibial tubercle region, and the remainder were only administered vancomycin as controls. Post-surgery, the researchers monitored patient-reported pain, nausea and opioid use for up to 14 days after surgery. Serum levels of morphine and interleukin-6 were measured in all study participants for 10 hours after the operation.

Analysis showed that the vancomycin and morphine group had lower pain scores after their knee replacements compared to the controls. This was effective up to two weeks after surgery. Further, these patients also reported having less pain for several days even though they had similar interleukin-6 inflammatory marker levels as the control group. Taken together, although the patients who received pain medication infused directly into the tibia during surgery had comparable inflammation, these patients were taking less pain medication post-surgery.

Dr Park noted that this infusion of opiates directly into the bone marrow during surgery could potentially even facilitate a swifter recovery of the knee joint.

“By infusing pain medication intraosseously we’re able to reduce postoperative pain for up to two weeks, reduce the number of pain pills patients need and even possibly improve the function of the knee over time,” he said. “Our technique also can improve the multimodal pain management protocol we have been using for knee replacement over the years.” 

Source: Houston Methodist

Medicinal Plant Extract Could Quell Opioid Epidemic

Photo by Bill Oxford on Unsplash

In a bid to tackle the global opioid crisis, researchers have found that a Chinese medicinal plant extract can prevent morphine tolerance and dependence while also reversing opiate addiction. The researchers published their results in Pharmaceuticals.

For over two decades, opioid analgesic overprescription has driven a wave of misuse and consequent drive overdose deaths around the world, with the number of drug overdose deaths tripling in the US from 1997 to 2017. The COVID pandemic has only worsened the opioid epidemic. Fortunately, the documented effects of YHS, the extract of the plant Corydalis yanhusuo, could help curb the opioid epidemic.

“It is critical that we decrease the use and abuse of opiates,” said Olivier Civelli, PhD, professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the UCI School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences and corresponding author. “To help achieve this goal, we are proposing the use of this therapeutic plant. When used in animals, the Corydalis extract prevents pain and the negative effects of opiate use. The next step would be to test it with humans.”

The overprescription of opioid analgesics stemmed from treatment of chronic pain requiring repeated opioid administrations. This ultimately leads to tolerance, physical dependence, and addiction.

One possible solution involves a co-medication that maintains the analgesic benefits of opioids while preventing their adverse liabilities. The study showed that YHS, when co-administered with morphine, inhibits morphine tolerance, dependence and addiction. 

In Chinese traditional medicine, YHS has been used as an analgesic for centuries. It is considered safe and readily available for purchase.
“Opiate tolerance is of utmost importance to opiate users,” ProfvCivelli said. “They need to constantly increase the need of opiates to reach the same analgesic response. This is what leads to opiate overdose. YHS prevents opiate tolerance, so there is less need to increase opiate consumption.”

Source: University of California, Irvine