oxymorphone and Vomiting

oxymorphone has been researched along with Vomiting* in 4 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for oxymorphone and Vomiting

ArticleYear
Considerations on the use of oxymorphone in geriatric patients.
    Expert opinion on drug safety, 2009, Volume: 8, Issue:5

    Pain among the elderly is pervasive, under-treated and can be properly managed by judiciously using analgesics in the armamentarium. For severe pain, opioids generally provide the most effective pain relief, but concerns about safety and tolerability have limited, often unnecessarily, their utilization in the geriatric population.. It is common for geriatric patients to be taking more than one medicine. Oxymorphone might be particularly well suited for use in geriatric patients, in that its metabolism is mainly through non-CYPP450 pathways, thereby posing less risk of interaction with the many drugs that are metabolized by the CYPP450 system. However, oxymorphone is not as familiar to clinicians as morphine or some other opioids. We review here the clinical studies on oxymorphone to outline the key considerations for use of oxymorphone in the geriatric population.. Nine available clinical trials of oxymorphone alone or comparing oxymorphone with placebo or other active agents were analyzed with respect to the safety and tolerability findings. These studies included geriatric patients but were not designed to evaluate oxymorphone exclusively in this population.. Based on the results from nine published clinical studies, oxymorphone is an effective opioid analgesic with a safety profile at least comparable to other opioid drugs. At low starting doses and individual titration, oxymorphone should be considered for appropriate geriatric patients, particularly in whom there is concern about interaction with drugs that are metabolized by CYPP450 enzymes.

    Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Arthralgia; Biotransformation; Clinical Trials as Topic; Constipation; Drug Interactions; Glucuronosyltransferase; Humans; Liver; Narcotics; Nausea; Neoplasms; Opioid-Related Disorders; Oxymorphone; Pain; Pain, Postoperative; Polypharmacy; Receptors, Opioid, mu; Sleep Stages; Vomiting

2009

Trials

1 trial(s) available for oxymorphone and Vomiting

ArticleYear
Double-blind, randomized comparison of the analgesic and pharmacokinetic profiles of controlled- and immediate-release oral oxycodone in cancer pain patients.
    Journal of clinical pharmacology, 2001, Volume: 41, Issue:5

    Thirty patients with cancer pain completed a double-blind crossover study comparing controlled-release (CR) and immediate-release (IR) oxycodone. In open-label titration (2 to 21 days), these patients were stabilized on IR oxycodone qid. They were then randomized to double-blind treatment with CR oxycodone q12h or IR oxycodone qid for 3 to 7 days followed by crossover at the same daily dose. Mean (+/- SD) pain intensity (0 = none to 10 = severe) decreased from a baseline of 6.0 +/- 2.2 to 2.7 +/- 1.1 after titration with IR oxycodone dosed qid. Pain intensity remained stable throughout double-blind treatment: 2.7 +/- 1.9 with CR oxycodone and 2.8 +/- 1.9 with IR oxycodone. Acceptability of therapy and pain scores correlated with plasma oxycodone concentrations for each interval and were similar for both medications (IR and CR oxycodone). Adverse events were similar for both formulations. Following repeat dosing under double-blind conditions, oral CR oxycodone administered q12h provided analgesia comparable to IR oxycodone given qid.

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Analgesics, Opioid; Biological Availability; Chronic Disease; Cross-Over Studies; Delayed-Action Preparations; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Double-Blind Method; Drug Administration Schedule; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Morphinans; Neoplasms; Oxycodone; Oxymorphone; Pain; Pain Measurement; Therapeutic Equivalency; Vomiting

2001

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for oxymorphone and Vomiting

ArticleYear
When all oral opioids cause nausea and vomiting.
    Journal of pain and symptom management, 1988,Spring, Volume: 3, Issue:2

    Topics: Adult; Analgesics, Opioid; Female; Humans; Hydromorphone; Oxymorphone; Suppositories; Vomiting

1988
[Inhibition of levallorphan (N-allyl-3-oxymorphone) considering the emetic and anti-emetic effect of morphine].
    Archivio italiano di scienze farmacologiche, 1956, Volume: 6, Issue:1

    Topics: Antiemetics; Emetics; Humans; Levallorphan; Morphine; Morphine Derivatives; Oxymorphone; Vomiting

1956