Robertson S A, Taylor P M
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Feline Med Surg. 2004 Oct;6(5):321-33. doi: 10.1016/j.jfms.2003.10.002.
Opioids have an unjustified reputation for causing mania in cats, but with refinements in dosing they are now used successfully in this species. The mu-opioid agonists are generally considered the best analgesics. Morphine (0.1-0.3 mg/kg) is effective in a clinical setting. Methadone (up to 0.5 mg/kg) has a similar profile to morphine. Pethidine (Demerol, meperidine; 2-5 mg/kg) is a useful analgesic with a faster onset but shorter duration of action than morphine. Oxymorphone and hydromorphone (0.05-0.1 mg/kg) are widely used in the USA. These opioids are more potent (up to 10 times), and longer acting than morphine in cats. Butorphanol (0.1-0.4 mg/kg) is a mu-opioid antagonist that produces its analgesic actions through kappa agonist activity. It rapidly reaches a ceiling effect, is short acting and is a weaker analgesic than pure mu opioids. Buprenorphine (0.01-0.02 mg/kg), a partial mu-agonist, is the most popular opioid used in small animal practice in the UK, other parts of Europe, Australia and South Africa. In clinical studies it has produced better analgesia than several other opioids and appears to be highly suitable for perioperative pain management in cats. NSAIDs are also used in cats for pain management, although cats metabolise these differently from other species. With appropriate dosing, carprofen (1-4 mg/kg) and meloxicam (0.3 mg/kg) have proved highly effective with few side effects. The use of ketoprofen (2 mg/kg), tolfenamic acid (4 mg/kg) and vedaprofen (0.5 mg/kg) has been reported in cats. Other less traditional analgesics such as ketamine, medetomidine and local anaesthetics are also used for clinical pain management. The transmucosal, transdermal and epidural routes offer novel methods for administration of analgesic drugs and have considerable potential for improving techniques in feline pain management.
阿片类药物在猫身上有致躁狂的名声,但随着给药方法的改进,它们现在已成功用于该物种。μ-阿片受体激动剂通常被认为是最佳镇痛药。吗啡(0.1 - 0.3毫克/千克)在临床环境中有效。美沙酮(高达0.5毫克/千克)与吗啡有相似的作用特点。哌替啶(度冷丁、美吡利啶;2 - 5毫克/千克)是一种有用的镇痛药,起效比吗啡快,但作用持续时间短。羟吗啡酮和氢吗啡酮(0.05 - 0.1毫克/千克)在美国广泛使用。这些阿片类药物比吗啡效力更强(高达10倍),在猫身上作用时间更长。布托啡诺(0.1 - 0.4毫克/千克)是一种μ-阿片受体拮抗剂,通过κ激动剂活性产生镇痛作用。它很快达到封顶效应,作用时间短,且镇痛作用比纯μ阿片类药物弱。丁丙诺啡(0.01 - 0.02毫克/千克),一种部分μ激动剂,是英国、欧洲其他地区、澳大利亚和南非小动物临床中最常用的阿片类药物。在临床研究中,它比其他几种阿片类药物产生了更好的镇痛效果,似乎非常适合猫的围手术期疼痛管理。非甾体抗炎药也用于猫的疼痛管理,尽管猫对这些药物的代谢与其他物种不同。通过适当给药,卡洛芬(1 - 4毫克/千克)和美洛昔康(0.3毫克/千克)已被证明非常有效且副作用很少。有报道称在猫身上使用了酮洛芬(2毫克/千克)、托芬那酸(4毫克/千克)和维达洛芬(0.5毫克/千克)。其他不太传统的镇痛药如氯胺酮、美托咪定和局部麻醉药也用于临床疼痛管理。经黏膜、经皮和硬膜外途径为镇痛药的给药提供了新方法,在改善猫疼痛管理技术方面有很大潜力。