The duration of respiratory depression induced by morphine 10 mg/70 kg was studied following the administration of one of two opioid antagonists. Respiratory measurements included: (i) the ventilatory response to carbon dioxide, described in two ways-the minute ventilation at an end-tidal carbon dioxide partial pressure of 8 kPa (VE8) and the log slope of the ventilatory response to carbon dioxide; (ii) resting end-tidal carbon dioxide partial pressure; (iii) rate of ventilation. One hour after administration of morphine, one of the following was given i.v.: nalmefene 0.4 mg/70 kg; naloxone 0.4 mg/ 70 kg (low dose): naloxone 1.6 mg/ 70 kg (high dose); or saline placebo. The depression of VE8 by morphine was antagonized by all three treatments for the 1.5 h after the injection. However, for the 1.5-6 h after antagonist, VE8 following naloxone became depressed, whereas VE8 after nalmefene remained significantly increased compared with other treatments. Nalmefene restored the slope of the ventilatory response to baseline for 6 h and differed significantly from low but not high dose naloxone. Resting end-tidal carbon dioxide measurements demonstrated that nalmefene activity exceeded that of low but not high dose naloxone over the 1.5-4.5 h period. Rate of ventilation was not different between treatments. © 1988 British Journal of Anaesthesia.
CITATION STYLE
Konieczko, K. M., Jones, J. G., Barrowcliffe, M. P., Jordan, C., & Altman, D. G. (1988). Antagonism of morphine-induced respiratory depression with nalmefene. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 61(3), 318–323. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/61.3.318
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