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neuro:opioids:hydromorphone

Hydromorphone (Dilaudid®)

Hydromorphone
Brand Names Dilaudid®, Exalgo®
Drug Class Opioid (Full μ-agonist)
Primary Indication Moderate–Severe Pain
Relative Potency 4–7× Morphine
Histamine Release Minimal
Respiratory Depression Yes (dose-dependent)
Weight Effect Neutral
Elimination Hepatic metabolism
Controlled Substance Schedule II
FDA Approval 1926

Overview

Hydromorphone is a semi-synthetic, full μ-opioid receptor agonist used for moderate to severe pain.

It is significantly more potent than morphine and causes less histamine release, making it better tolerated in patients prone to hypotension or pruritus.

Hydromorphone is commonly used in inpatient settings and palliative care due to its potency and predictable pharmacokinetics.


Mechanism of Action

Receptor Activity

  • Full μ-opioid receptor agonist
  • Gi-protein coupled receptor activation

Cellular Effects

  • ↓ cAMP production
  • ↑ Potassium efflux → neuronal hyperpolarization
  • ↓ Calcium influx → ↓ substance P & glutamate release

Net Effect

  • Potent analgesia
  • CNS and respiratory depression

Indications

  • Severe acute pain
  • Chronic severe pain
  • Cancer-related pain
  • Postoperative pain
  • Palliative care

Extended-release formulation:

  • For opioid-tolerant patients only

Contraindications

Absolute:

  • Significant respiratory depression
  • Acute severe bronchial asthma
  • Paralytic ileus

Relative / Caution:

  • Hepatic impairment
  • Renal impairment
  • Elderly
  • Concomitant CNS depressants
  • Obstructive sleep apnea

Dosing

Immediate-Release (oral):

  • 2–4 mg every 4–6 hours

IV:

  • 0.2–1 mg every 2–3 hours as needed

Extended-Release:

  • Once daily (opioid-tolerant patients only)

Equianalgesic:

  • 1.5 mg IV hydromorphone ≈ 10 mg IV morphine
  • 7.5 mg oral hydromorphone ≈ 30 mg oral morphine

See:


Pharmacokinetics

Absorption:

  • Oral and IV

Bioavailability:

  • ~50%

Metabolism:

  • Hepatic glucuronidation
  • Hydromorphone-3-glucuronide (inactive but may accumulate)

Half-life:

  • ~2–3 hours (IR)

Elimination:

  • Renal excretion of metabolites

Less accumulation risk than morphine, but caution in severe renal impairment.


Adverse Effects

Common:

  • Sedation
  • Constipation
  • Nausea / vomiting
  • Dizziness

Serious:

  • Respiratory depression
  • Physical dependence
  • Opioid use disorder

Less histamine release than morphine → less pruritus and hypotension.


Drug Interactions

CNS depressants:

  • Benzodiazepines
  • Alcohol
  • Other opioids

Additive respiratory depression risk.


Monitoring

Clinical:

  • Pain control
  • Sedation level
  • Respiratory rate

High-risk patients:

  • Renal function
  • Hepatic function

Clinical Pearls

  • 4–7× more potent than morphine.
  • Less histamine release → less hypotension.
  • Commonly used in hospital and palliative settings.
  • No ceiling effect (full μ agonist).
  • Requires careful dose conversion from morphine.

Toxicity

Classic opioid toxidrome:

  • CNS depression
  • Respiratory depression
  • Miosis

Treatment:


Comparison Within Class

Compared to Morphine:

  • More potent
  • Less histamine release
  • Less hypotension

Compared to Fentanyl:

  • Less potent
  • Less lipophilic

Compared to Oxycodone:

  • More potent
  • More commonly used IV

neuro/opioids/hydromorphone.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns