| Fentanyl | |
|---|---|
| Brand Names | Duragesic®, Sublimaze®, Actiq® |
| Drug Class | Opioid (Full μ-agonist) |
| Primary Indication | Severe Pain / Anesthesia |
| Relative Potency | ~100× Morphine |
| Histamine Release | Minimal |
| Respiratory Depression | Yes (high potency) |
| Weight Effect | Neutral |
| Elimination | Hepatic metabolism |
| Controlled Substance | Schedule II |
| FDA Approval | 1968 |
Fentanyl is a highly potent, synthetic full μ-opioid receptor agonist used for severe pain and anesthesia.
It is approximately 100 times more potent than morphine and is highly lipophilic, allowing for rapid CNS penetration.
Unlike morphine, fentanyl causes minimal histamine release and is often preferred in patients with renal impairment or hemodynamic instability.
Receptor Activity
Cellular Effects
Net Effect
Transdermal patch:
Absolute:
Relative / Caution:
IV (anesthesia/acute pain):
Transdermal patch:
Transmucosal (lozenge, buccal):
Equianalgesic:
See:
Absorption:
Lipophilicity:
Metabolism:
Half-life:
Elimination:
Preferred in renal failure due to lack of active renally cleared metabolites.
Common:
Serious:
Minimal histamine release compared to morphine.
CYP3A4 inhibitors (↑ fentanyl levels):
CNS depressants:
Risk:
Clinical:
High-risk situations:
Classic opioid toxidrome:
Overdose risk is high due to potency.
Treatment:
Compared to Morphine:
Compared to Hydromorphone:
Compared to Remifentanil: