British journal of pharmacology | 2021

The anomalous pharmacology of fentanyl.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Fentanyl is a key therapeutic used in anaesthesia and pain management. It is also increasingly used illicitly and is responsible for a large and growing number of opioid overdose deaths, especially in North America. A number of factors have been suggested to contribute to fentanyl s lethality, including rapid onset of action, in vivo potency, ligand bias, induction of muscle rigidity and reduced sensitivity to reversal by naloxone. Some of these factors can be considered to represent anomalous pharmacological properties of fentanyl when compared to prototypical opioid agonists such as morphine. In this review, we examine the nature of fentanyl s anomalous properties, to determine whether there really is a pharmacological basis to support the existence of such properties, and also discuss whether such properties are likely to contribute to overdose deaths involving fentanyls.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1111/bph.15573
Language English
Journal British journal of pharmacology

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