Wooden Chest syndrome: The atypical pharmacology of fentanyl overdose

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Abstract

What is known and objective: A large percentage of opioid overdose fatalities involve fentanyl or one of its legal or illegal analogs (F/FAs). Is there something about the pharmacology of these drugs that make them unusually dangerous in an overdose?. Comment: Some of the reasons for the dangers of overdose of F/FAs is their high potency and low cost (that leads to wide distribution). But it is rarely asked if the basic pharmacology of F/FAs differ in some fundamental way from conventional opioids such as morphine and heroin. In addition to centrally mediated respiratory depression via opioid receptors, F/FAs cause rigidity in the key respiratory muscles of the chest, upper airway and diaphragm (“wooden chest syndrome,” WCS) by a non-opioid mechanism. What is new and conclusion: WCS is an atypical pharmacology of F/FAs. Because of its rapid onset and non-opioid mechanism, WCS makes F/FA overdose particularly dangerous.

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APA

Pergolizzi, J. V., Webster, L. R., Vortsman, E., Ann LeQuang, J., & Raffa, R. B. (2021, December 1). Wooden Chest syndrome: The atypical pharmacology of fentanyl overdose. Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpt.13484

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