Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Drugs. 2011 Oct 1;71(14):1807-19. doi: 10.2165/11596250-000000000-00000.
Morphine is a drug commonly administered via the epidural or intrathecal route, and is regarded by many as the 'gold-standard' single-dose neuraxial opioid due to its postoperative analgesic efficacy and prolonged duration of action. However, respiratory depression is a recognized side effect of neuraxial morphine administered in the perioperative setting. We conducted an extensive review of articles published since 1945 that examine respiratory depression or failure associated with perioperative intrathecal or epidural morphine use. Respiratory depression was previously thought to result from the interaction of opioid in the cerebrospinal fluid with ventral medullary opioid receptors. More recently, the preBötzinger complex located in the medulla has been identified as the site responsible for the decrease in respiratory rate following systemic administration of opioids. Neurons in the preBötzinger complex expressing neurokinin-1 receptors are selectively inhibited by opioids, and therefore are the mediators of opioid-induced respiratory depression. Epidural, intrathecal and plasma pharmacokinetics of opioids are complex, vary between neuraxial compartments, and can even differ within the epidural space itself depending upon level of insertion. Caution should be exercised when prescribing systemic opioids (intravenous or oral) in addition to neuraxial morphine as this can compound the potential for early or delayed respiratory depression. There is a wide range of incidences for respiratory depression following neuraxial morphine in a perioperative setting. Disparity of definitions used for the diagnosis of respiratory depression in the literature precludes identification of the exact incidence of this rare event. The optimal neuraxial opioid dose is a balance between the conflicting demands of providing optimal analgesia while minimizing dose-related adverse effects. Dose-response studies show that neuraxial morphine appears to have an analgesic efficacy 'ceiling'. The optimal 'single-shot' intrathecal dose appears to be 0.075-0.15 mg and the ideal 'single-shot' epidural morphine dose is 2.5-3.75 mg. Analgesic efficacy studies have not been adequately powered to show differences in the incidence of clinically significant respiratory depression. Opioid antagonists such as naloxone to prevent or treat opioid-induced respiratory depression have a number of limitations. Researchers have recently focused on non-opioid drugs such as serotonin receptor agonists. Early evidence suggests that ampakine (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionic acid [AMPA]) receptor modulators may be effective at reducing opioid-induced respiratory depression while maintaining analgesia. Sodium/proton exchanger type 3 (NHE3) inhibitors, which act centrally on respiratory pathways, also warrant further study.
吗啡通常通过硬膜外或鞘内途径给药,由于其术后镇痛效果和作用持续时间长,许多人认为它是单一剂量神经轴突阿片类药物的“金标准”。然而,呼吸抑制是围手术期鞘内或硬膜外给予吗啡的公认副作用。我们对自 1945 年以来发表的检查围手术期鞘内或硬膜外吗啡使用相关呼吸抑制或衰竭的文章进行了广泛审查。呼吸抑制以前被认为是由于阿片类药物在脑脊液中与腹侧延髓阿片受体相互作用引起的。最近,位于延髓中的 PreBotzinger 复合体被确定为全身给予阿片类药物后呼吸频率下降的部位。表达神经激肽-1 受体的 PreBotzinger 复合体中的神经元被阿片类药物选择性抑制,因此是阿片类药物引起呼吸抑制的介导物。阿片类药物的硬膜外、鞘内和血浆药代动力学复杂,在神经轴突隔室之间存在差异,甚至在硬膜外空间本身根据插入水平的不同而有所不同。在开处方全身阿片类药物(静脉或口服)的同时应谨慎使用鞘内吗啡,因为这可能会增加早期或延迟性呼吸抑制的可能性。在围手术期,鞘内给予吗啡后出现呼吸抑制的发生率范围很广。文献中用于诊断呼吸抑制的定义差异使得无法确定这种罕见事件的确切发生率。最佳神经轴突阿片类药物剂量是在提供最佳镇痛效果与最小剂量相关不良反应之间的平衡。剂量反应研究表明,神经轴突吗啡似乎具有镇痛效果“上限”。最佳“单次”鞘内剂量似乎为 0.075-0.15mg,理想的“单次”硬膜外吗啡剂量为 2.5-3.75mg。镇痛效果研究尚未充分有力地显示出临床上显著的呼吸抑制发生率的差异。阿片类拮抗剂,如纳洛酮,用于预防或治疗阿片类药物引起的呼吸抑制有许多局限性。研究人员最近专注于非阿片类药物,如 5-羟色胺受体激动剂。早期证据表明,ampakine(α-氨基-3-羟基-5-甲基-4-异恶唑丙酸[AMPA])受体调节剂可能在保持镇痛的同时有效降低阿片类药物引起的呼吸抑制。作用于呼吸途径的中枢钠离子/质子交换器 3(NHE3)抑制剂也值得进一步研究。