| Morphine
Morphine
is the principal constituent of opium and can range
in concentration from 4 to 21 percent. Commercial opium
is standardized to contain 10-percent morphine. In the
United States, a small percentage of the morphine obtained
from opium is used directly (about 15 tons): the remaining
is converted to codeine and other derivatives (about
120 tons). Morphine is one of the most effective drugs
known for the relief of severe pain and remains the
standard against which new analgesics are measured.
Like most narcotics, the use of morphine has increased
significantly in recent years. Since 1990, there has
been about a 3-fold increase in morphine products in
the United States.
Morphine
is marketed under generic and brand name products including
"MS-Contin®," Oramorph SR®,"
MSIR®," Roxanol®," Kadian®,"
and RMS®." Morphine is used parenterally (by
injection) for preoperative sedation, as a supplement
to anesthesia, and for analgesia. It is the drug of
choice for relieving pain of myocardial infarction and
for its cardiovascular effects in the treatment of acute
pulmonary edema. Traditionally; morphine was almost
exclusively used by injection. Today, morphine is marketed
in a variety of forms, including oral solutions, immediate
and sustained-release tablets and capsules, suppositories,
and injectable preparations. In addition, the availability
of high-concentration morphine preparations (i.e., 20-mg/ml
oral solutions, 25-mg/ml injectable solutions, and 200-mg
sustained-release tablets) partially reflects the use
of this substance for chronic pain management in opiate-tolerant
patients. |