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Opium, opiates

Opiate refers to any drug derived from opium. Opiates inciude codeine, morphine, and papaverine. [Pg.13]

Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914 Established regulations for use of opium, opiates, and cocaine (marijuana added in 1937). [Pg.101]

Morphine and codeine as well as their natural and synthetic derivatives ultimately derived from opium ( opiates )... [Pg.151]

The Opiates. The International Narcotics Control Board—Vienna, tracks the tick production of narcotic dmgs and annually estimates world requkements for the United Nations. Thek most recent pubHcation (100) points out that more than 95% of the opium for Hcit medical and scientific purposes is produced by India and, in a declining trend, only about 600 t was utilized in 1988. This trend appears to be due to the fact that the United States, the largest user of opium for alkaloid extraction, reduced the amount of opium being imported from about 440 t in 1986 to 249 t in 1987 and 224 t in 1988. The United States used about 48 t of morphine (2, R = H) in 1988, most (about 90%) being converted to codeine (2, R = CH3) and the remainder being used for oral adrninistration to the terminally ill (about 2 t) and for conversion to other materials of minor commercial import which, while clearly alkaloid-derived, are not naturally occurring. [Pg.557]

P-Endorphin. A peptide corresponding to the 31 C-terminal amino acids of P-LPH was first discovered in camel pituitary tissue (10). This substance is P-endorphin, which exerts a potent analgesic effect by binding to cell surface receptors in the central nervous system. The sequence of P-endorphin is well conserved across species for the first 25 N-terminal amino acids. Opiates derived from plant sources, eg, heroin, morphine, opium, etc, exert their actions by interacting with the P-endorphin receptor. On a molar basis, this peptide has approximately five times the potency of morphine. Both P-endorphin and ACTH ate cosecreted from the pituitary gland. Whereas the physiologic importance of P-endorphin release into the systemic circulation is not certain, this molecule clearly has been shown to be an important neurotransmitter within the central nervous system. Endorphin has been invaluable as a research tool, but has not been clinically useful due to the avadabihty of plant-derived opiates. [Pg.175]

Enkephalins and Endorphins. Morphine (142), an alkaloid found in opium, was first isolated in the early nineteenth century and widely used in patent medicines of that eta. It is pharmacologically potent and includes analgesic and mood altering effects. Endogenous opiates, the enkephalins, endorphins, and dynotphins were identified in the mid-1970s (3,51) (see Opioids, endogenous). Enkephalins and endorphins ate Hsted in Table 9. [Pg.544]

In the strict sense, opiates are drugs which are derived from opium and include the natural products morphine, codeine, thebaine and many semi-synthetic congeners derived from them. In the wider sense, opiates are morphine-like drugs with non-peptidic structures. The old term opiates is now more and more replaced by the term opioids which applies to any substance, whether endogenous or synthetic, pqrtidic or non-peptidic, that produces morphine-like effects through an action on opioid receptors. [Pg.903]

The word opioid is used to refer to the overall class including the semi- and fully-synthetic agents, but the word opiate only refers to the naturally occurring opioids such as heroin, opium, and morphine. [Pg.532]

When Montgomery and I published our article, we thought we had disproven another theory of placebo effects - the theory that placebo effects are produced by the release of endorphins in the brain. In 1978 researchers at the University of California in San Francisco discovered that when placebos reduce pain, they may stimulate the release of endorphins.18 Endorphins, the existence of which had only been discovered a few years earlier, are opioids that are produced naturally by the brain. Just like the opiates that are derived from opium - morphine and codeine, for example - endorphins reduce the sensation of pain. The University of California researchers reasoned that if placebos can mimic the effects of opiate drugs, maybe they do so by stimulating the release of the brain s endogenous opioids. [Pg.138]

Inhalation (IH) The administration of volatile gases and vapours, followed by drug absorption in the lungs or nasal mucosa. Examples include general anaesthetics like nitrous oxide, nicotine from the tar droplets in tobacco smoke, cannabinoids from cannabis leaf smoke and various opiates from burning opium resin. [Pg.28]

Morphine A naturally occurring opiate, found in the dried sap or opium of Papaver somniferum. [Pg.245]

Opiate A drug related to morphine, derived from opium. [Pg.247]

Opium and its derivatives have been employed for centuries for the treatment of pain. Morphine was first synthesized in 1805 and has proven to be one of the most effective analgesic agents available [1], Morphine and its analogs are particularly useful because they diminish pain sensation while maintaining consciousness. However, opiates induce severe side-effects including respiratory depression, nausea, bradycardia and constipation and long-term use of opiates can cause addiction [2]. [Pg.461]

Opiates are drugs derived from opium, including morphine and heroin 914... [Pg.911]

It is now recognized that opiates reduce resistance to a variety of infectious agents in both humans and animals. These effects are summarized in Table 30.3 and Table 30.4 and discussed below. For example, pulmonary infections caused by mycobacteria, staphylococci, streptococci, Hemophilus and other common organisms are frequent among opium abusers.23 24 Other infectious diseases caused by microbial pathogens in... [Pg.530]

Opiates (Heroin, Demerol, morphine, opium, etc.), non-hal-lucinogenic amphetamines (Methedrine, Preludin, "bennies," etc.) and barbituates ("reds," "yellows," etc.) are all addictive, lend... [Pg.18]

Operations improvement, waste minimization via, 25 884t Ophthalmic drug delivery systems, 18 711 Ophthalmic drug dosage forms, 18 716 Ophthalmic solutions, ethylene oxide polymers in, 10 687 Opiates, economic aspects, 2 108 Opium, 2 89-90... [Pg.648]


See other pages where Opium, opiates is mentioned: [Pg.35]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.548]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.548]    [Pg.1498]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.502]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.914]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.530]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.107]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.108 , Pg.187 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.6 , Pg.6 , Pg.20 , Pg.23 , Pg.25 , Pg.29 , Pg.43 ]




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Opiate

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