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Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Apr 11, 2016

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Page 1: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Addiction

Page 2: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

A chronic neurologic and biologic disease defined by pain specialists and

characterized by behaviors that include one or more of the following: impaired control over drug use, compulsive use,

continued used despite harm, and craving to use the opioid for effects other than

pain relief

Page 3: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Adjuvant analgesic agent

Page 4: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

A drug that has a primary indication other than pain (e.g., anticonvulsant,

antidepressant, sodium channel blocker, or muscle relaxant) but is an

analgesic agent for some painful conditions; sometimes referred to as

co-analgesic

Page 5: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Agonist-antagonist

Page 6: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

A type of opioid (e.g., nalbuphine [Nubain] and butorphanol [Stadol]) that binds to

the kappa opioid receptor site acting as an agonist (capable of producing analgesia)

and simultaneously to the mu opioid receptor site acting as an antagonist

(reversing mu agonist effects)

Page 7: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Allodynia

Page 8: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Pain due to a stimulus that does not normally provoke pain, such as touch;

typically experienced in the skin around areas affected by nerve injury

and commonly seen with many neuropathic pain syndromes

Page 9: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Antagonist

Page 10: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Drug that competes with agonists for opioid receptor binding sites; can

displace agonists, thereby inhibiting their action

Page 11: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Breakthrough pain (BTP)

Page 12: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

A transitory increase in pain that occurs on a background of otherwise

controlled persistent pain

Page 13: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Ceiling effect

Page 14: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

An analgesic dose above which further dose increments produce no

change in effect

Page 15: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Central sensitization

Page 16: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

A key central mechanism of neuropathic pain; the abnormal

hyperexcitability of central neurons in the spinal cord, which results from complex changes induced by the incoming barrages of nociceptors

Page 17: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Comfort-functioning goal

Page 18: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

The pain rating identified by the individual patient above which the

patient experiences interference with function and quality of life (e.g.,

activities the patient needs or wishes to perform)

Page 19: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Efficacy

Page 20: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

The extent to which a drug or another treatment “works” and can produce the effect in question – analgesia in

this context

Page 21: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Half-life

Page 22: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

The time it takes for the plasma concentration (amount of drug in the body) to be reduced by 50% (After starting a drug, or increasing its dose, four to

five half-lives are required to approacha steady-state level in the blood, irrespective of the dose, dosing interval, or route of administration; after

four to five half-lives, a drug that has been discontinued generally is considered to be mostly

eliminated from the body.)

Page 23: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Hydrophilic

Page 24: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Readily absorbed in aqueous solution

Page 25: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Intraspinal

Page 26: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

“within the spine”; refers to the spaces or potential spaces

surrounding the spinal cord into which medications can be

administered

Page 27: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Lipophilic

Page 28: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Readily absorbed in fatty tissues

Page 29: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Metabolite

Page 30: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

The product of biochemical reactions during drug metabolism

Page 31: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Mu agonist

Page 32: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab

Any opioid that binds to the mu opioid receptor subtype and produces

analgesic effects (e.g., morphine): used interchangeably with the terms

full agonist, pure agonist, and morphinelike drug

Page 33: Chapter 12 - Pain Management Vocab