Chowdhury Mursheda Mahbub, Board Richard
Department of Palliative Medicine, St Michael's Hospice, 25 Upper Maze Hill, St Leonard's-on-Sea, East Sussex TN38 0LB, UK.
Cases J. 2009 Dec 23;2:9391. doi: 10.1186/1757-1626-2-9391.
Palliation of pain with morphine in cancer patients can be complicated by adverse effects. Tolerance to these effects such as nausea and drowsiness usually occurs within a few days allowing continuation of morphine therapy. However, some patients may develop intolerable adverse effects even after several months on morphine when the dose is increased. A case of morphine-induced hallucinations in a cancer patient who had been on a subcutaneous infusion of diamorphine for several months is discussed. A switch to oxycodone resolved his hallucinations and gave him a new lease of life. The theories behind and evidence for opioid-switching is discussed along with strategies for dealing with intolerable opioid-induced adverse effects.