Results 321 to 330 of about 315,380 (361)
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Opioid mechanisms and opioid drugs

Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine, 2005
Abstract Opioid analgesic drugs mimic the actions of three groups of endogenous opioid peptides, the enkephalins, dynorphins and endorphins. Opioid receptors have been cloned and have been classified as OP 1 (delta), OP 2 (kappa), OP 3 (mu) and OP 4 (ORL-1). The first three correspond to the classical opioid receptors that mediate analgesia.
openaire   +2 more sources

Opioid Insights

Journal of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy, 2004
Opioid analgesics are an irreplaceable component of pharmacotherapy of numerous pain-producing conditions. Clinicians and patients must contend with the imperfect nature of this class of drugs, trying to balance benefits and burdens on a continual basis. New literature related to evidence-based selection of opioids and the neurobiological phenomenon of
openaire   +2 more sources

Opioid and Non-opioid Therapy

2019
Despite many advances made in the field of interventional pain management in the past decades, pharmacological therapy often remains the core of the spine pain multimodal treatment. It represents an indispensable therapeutic tool, especially when more interventional methods either failed or are not indicated.
Yakov Vorobeychik   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Opioids

Cephalalgia, 2000
S D, Silberstein, D C, McCrory
openaire   +2 more sources

The Basics of Opioids and Opioid Addiction

2019
What are opioids? Opioids are a group of chemical compounds that can reduce pain, cause sensations of pleasure, and induce sleep. To have these and other effects on the human body, all opioids interact with specific receptors on the surface of cells called opioid...
Yngvild Olsen, Joshua M. Sharfstein
openaire   +1 more source

Opioid Tolerance or Opioid Withdrawal?

Anesthesiology, 2013
Sloan C. Youngblood, Mark J. Harbott
openaire   +3 more sources

Opioid and opioid-like

British Journal of Pharmacology, 2006
Alistair Mathie   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Opioid Analgesics and Opioid Antagonists

1980
By opioid is meant any drug, regardless of chemical structure, that acts like morphine. The term opioid is preferred to the older term, opiate, for two reasons: first, because opiate implies presence in or derivation from opium, which indeed contains the analgesic drugs morphine and codeine but also contains thebaine, a strong stimulant (convulsive ...
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Opioide

1998
Michael Heck, Michael Fresenius
openaire   +1 more source

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