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Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine Hydrochloride and Respiratory depression

Result of checking the interaction of drug Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine Hydrochloride and disease Respiratory depression for safety when used together.

Check result:
Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine Hydrochloride <> Respiratory depression
Relevance: 23.07.2019 Reviewer: Shkutko P.M., M.D., in

When checking interaction based on authoritative sources Drugs.com, Rxlist.com, Webmd.com, Medscape.com there are contraindications or side effects that may cause harm or increase the negative effect from drug use in presence of concomitant diseases.

Consumer:

Opiate partial agonists may produce respiratory depression by decreasing respiratory drive and increasing airway resistance. A "ceiling effect" has been noted for these agents, and increasing doses do not produce proportional or further respiratory depression. However, the duration of effect is prolonged. At therapeutic analgesic dosages, the respiratory effects are usually not clinically important except in patients with preexisting pulmonary impairment. Therapy with opiate partial agonists should be avoided or administered with extreme caution and initiated at reduced dosages in patients with severe CNS or respiratory depression; acute alcohol intoxication; sleep apnea; hypoxia, anoxia, or hypercapnia; upper airway obstruction; chronic pulmonary insufficiency; a limited ventilatory reserve; or other respiratory disorders. In the presence of excessive respiratory secretions, the use of opiate partial agonists may also be problematic because they decrease ciliary activity and reduce the cough reflex. Caution is also advised in patients who may be at increased risk for respiratory depression, such as comatose patients or those with head injury, intracranial lesions, or intracranial hypertension. Clinical monitoring of pulmonary function is recommended, and equipment for resuscitation should be immediately available if parenteral routes are used. Naloxone may be administered to reverse clinically significant respiratory depression. However, in the case of buprenorphine, naloxone may not be effective due to buprenorphine's slow rate of dissociation from mu receptors.

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Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine Hydrochloride

Generic Name: buprenorphine

Brand Name: Belbuca, Buprenex, Butrans, Probuphine, Sublocade, Subutex

Synonyms: Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine (implant)

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