enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Opioid overdose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid_overdose

    An opioid overdose is toxicity due to excessive consumption of opioids, such as morphine, codeine, heroin, fentanyl, tramadol, and methadone. [3] [5] This preventable pathology can be fatal if it leads to respiratory depression, a lethal condition that can cause hypoxia from slow and shallow breathing. [3]

  3. Laudanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laudanum

    Overdose can result in severe respiratory depression or collapse and death. The ethanol component can also induce adverse effects at higher doses; the side effects are the same as with alcohol. Long-term use of laudanum in nonterminal diseases is discouraged due to the possibility of drug tolerance and addiction. Long-term use can also lead to ...

  4. Combined drug intoxication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_drug_intoxication

    Alcohol can exacerbate the symptoms and may directly contribute to increased severity of symptoms. The reasons for toxicity vary depending on the mixture of drugs. Usually, most victims die after using two or more drugs in combination that suppress breathing, and the low blood oxygen level causes brain death. [6]

  5. Opioid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid

    This requires them to increase their drug dosage to maintain the benefit, and that in turn also increases the unwanted side effects. [78] Long-term opioid use can cause opioid-induced hyperalgesia, which is a condition in which the patient has increased sensitivity to pain. [101] All of the opioids can cause side effects. [70]

  6. Opioid epidemic in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid_epidemic_in_the...

    Codeine is a prescription opiate used to treat mild to moderate pain. It is available as a tablet and cough syrup. A 2013 study on the concoction of codeine with alcohol or soda, also known as "purple drank," reported that codeine is most widely used in a recreational way by men, Native Americans and Hispanics, urban students, and LGBT persons ...

  7. Morphine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphine

    Most morphine produced for pharmaceutical use around the world is converted into codeine as the concentration of the latter in both raw opium and poppy straw is much lower than that of morphine; in most countries, the usage of codeine (both as end-product and precursor) is at least equal or greater than that of morphine on a weight basis.

  8. Opiate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opiate

    Less common side effects include: delayed gastric emptying, hyperalgesia, immunologic and hormonal dysfunction (hypogonadism is often seen in men taking chronic opioids, but is not always clinically evident), muscle rigidity, and myoclonus. [32] Opiate use for pain is widely accepted in the healthcare system.

  9. Codeine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codeine

    Related to codeine in other ways are codoxime, thebacon, codeine-N-oxide (genocodeine), related to the nitrogen morphine derivatives as is codeine methobromide, and heterocodeine, which is a drug six times stronger than morphine and 72 times stronger than codeine due to a small re-arrangement of the molecule, namely moving the methyl group from ...