To better understand the use of narcotic analgesics, the hydromorphone concentration was measured in serum samples from 43 patients with chronic severe pain who were receiving this drug. At the time of blood sampling, pain intensity, mood, and cognitive performance were assessed. There was large individual variation in the dose-drug level relationship. Seven patients with bone or soft tissue pain and drug levels of greater than or equal to 4 ng/ml had good pain control, whereas 10 did not. None of 15 patients with levels less than 4 ng/ml had pain control, despite drug doses similar to those given patients with higher levels. Thus 60% of the patients without control of their pain had hydromorphone levels below the lowest level that produced pain control. No patient with pain from nerve infiltration or compression had good pain control, irrespective of the drug level or dose. Poor mood correlated with high pain intensity and low drug level. Impaired cognitive performance was not related to drug level. Knowing that there is a low concentration of narcotic in the blood of a patient with chronic severe pain who is receiving high drug doses and who shows lack of both efficacy and side effects may reassure health care professionals that further narcotic dosage escalation is appropriate.
Pain and mental status were assessed in a series of 35 consecutive hospitalized patients with metastatic cancer receiving narcotics for pain that was difficult to control. Forty-five episodes of mental status impairment were detected in 27 of these patients. Fifteen patients had dose-related oversedation or organic brain syndrome. In only 4 could the narcotic dose be decreased without exacerbating the pain. Eleven patients had mental status impairment associated with factors other than the narcotic dose. These factors were: concurrent CNS-depressant drugs, presence of fever or infection, or changing from parenteral to average oral equianalgesic dose of narcotic. When these factors were corrected, mental function improved and remained stable despite resumption of the previous narcotic dose. Delirium occurred more frequently in patients over 65, while oversedation without delirium was more frequent in the younger group. For some patients with advanced metastatic cancer, pain relief and intact mental status cannot coexist. For others, correction of factors other than narcotics which can impair function can often lead to improved mental status without decreasing narcotic dose or decreasing the degree of pain control.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.