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Meperidine Opium Oxycodone

See also Codeine Heroin Meperidine Opium Oxycodone... [Pg.361]

II High Yes Codeine, morphine, meperidine Same as Schedule 1 (Demerol), opium poppy, opium tincture (Laudanum), granulated opium, powdered opium, raw opium, oxycodone (OxyContin, Percocet), thebaine... [Pg.104]

Schedule II Amphetamine, Cocaine and Crack, Codeine, Lentanyl, Hydrocodone, Meperidine (Demerol ), Methadone, Methylphenidate (Ritalin), Morphine, Opium, Oxycodone (OxyContin , Percocet ), Phencyclidine (PCP)... [Pg.9]

Morphine, when extracted from raw opium and treated chemically, yields the semisynthetic narcotics hydromorphone, oxymorphone, oxycodone, and heroin. Heroin is an illegal narcotic in the United States and is not used in medicine. Synthetic narcotics are those man-made analgesics with properties and actions similar to the natural opioids. Examples of synthetic narcotic analgesics are methadone, levorphanol, remifen-tanil, and meperidine Additional narcotics are listed in the Summary Drug Table Narcotic Analgesics. [Pg.167]

Agonists include natural alkaloids of opium (morphine, codeine, and a large blend of natural alkaloids, pantopon, and omnopon), their analogs (hydrocodon and hydromor-phone, oxycodone, and oxymorphone), derivatives of morphinane (levorphanol), and a number of synthetic compounds derivatives of phenylpiperidine (meperidine, promedol), 4-anilidopiperidines (fentanyl, sufentanyl, alfentanil), and derivatives of diphenylheptane (methadone, propoxyphene). [Pg.20]

The most widely used agonists in medical practice are the opium alkaloids morphine and codeine. However, semisynthetic derivatives (hydromorphone, oxymorphone, hydrycodon, oxycodone), whose use is even preferred in certain cases, and strong, purely synthetic compounds (methadone, meperidin, fentanyl, sufentanyl, and others) have found wide use. [Pg.21]

The most known narcotics are the opium alkaloids such as morphine, codeine, thebaine, papaverine, noscapine and their derivatives and modified compounds such as nalmorphine, apomorphine, apomopholcodine, dihydrocodeine, hydro-morphone and heroine, also known as diamorphine. Synthetic narcotics share the structural skeleton of morphine and include dextromethorphan, pentazocine, phenazocine meperidine (pethidine), phentanyl, anfentaitil, remifentalin, methadone, dextropropoxyphene, levoproxyphene, dipipanone, dextromoramide, meptazinol and tramadol. Thebaine derivatives are also modified narcotics and include oxycodone, oxymorphone, etorphine, buprenorphine, nalbuphine, naloxone or naltrexone. Narcotics can be semi-synthesized or totally synthesized from the morphine and thebaine model. The compounds serve various purposes in clinical practise. [Pg.169]

The gold standard of opiate pain relievers is morphine. It was one of the first compounds extracted, isolated, and purified from the opium poppy, and it continues to be one of the most widely used pain relievers today. Morphine and other opiate drugs such as heroin, codeine, oxycodone, and hydrocodone have very similar chemical structures (Figure 3.2). However, other opiates such as fentanyl and meperidine (Demerol) have a slightly different structure (Figure 3.3). [Pg.40]


See other pages where Meperidine Opium Oxycodone is mentioned: [Pg.1339]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.73]   


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