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Fentanyl sublingual

Opioids maybe administered in a variety of routes including oral (tablet and liquid), sublingual, rectal, transdermal, transmucosal, intravenous, subcutaneous, and intraspinal. While the oral and transdermal routes are most common, the method of administration is based on patient needs (severity of pain) and characteristics (swallowing difficulty and preference). Oral opioids have an onset of effect of 45 minutes, so intravenous or subcutaneous administration maybe preferred if more rapid relief is desired. Intramuscular injections are not recommended because of pain at the injection site and wide fluctuations in drug absorption and peak plasma concentrations achieved. More invasive routes of administration such as PCA and intraspinal (epidural and intrathecal) are primarily used postoperatively, but may also be used in refractory chronic pain situations. PCA delivers a self-administered dose via an infusion pump with a preprogrammed dose, minimum dosing interval, and maximum hourly dose. Morphine, fentanyl, and hydromorphone are commonly administered via PCA pumps by the intravenous route, but less frequently by the subcutaneous or epidural route. [Pg.497]

Because faster onset of action is associated with higher potential for abuse, abuse-liability assessment should include consideration of whether a formulation can be altered to increase the speed of onset. There are numerous examples of abuse of a medication by a route other than that intended by the manufacturer. The sustained-release oral form of oxycodone, designed to deliver an initial rapid dose followed by slow release, has been widely abused by chewing the tablet, thus releasing the entire content of the tablet at once.65 There is also evidence for intravenous use of sublingual buprenorphine tablets.66 Transdermal systems developed to deliver medication slowly for extended periods of time have been prime targets for misuse,67 as discussed below in the case study of fentanyl. [Pg.151]

Fentanyl citrate Sublingual Spray Subsys INSYS Therapeutics... [Pg.1233]

Fentanyl citrate Sublingual Tablet Abstral Orexo AB... [Pg.1233]


See other pages where Fentanyl sublingual is mentioned: [Pg.522]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.55]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.196 ]




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Fentanyl

Sublingual

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