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#129225 - 04/24/06 08:36 AM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Journeyman
Registered: 10/28/04
Posts: 73
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As a nurse, I administer this medication quite often. It seems as though many doctors are migrating toward using this medication more often and using less Demerol then as before. Use to be, when a patient was administered one of the stronger pain meds, it was usually morphine or Demerol. I think doctors are realizing that Demerol can be quite dangerous due to the accumulation of normeperidine, a toxic metabolite of Demerol that remains in the system much longer after the pain killing properties have diminished.
Dilaudid is a wonderful medication if it's administered in a dosage high enough for the pain experienced by the patient. The problem arises when the patient gets less than what is necessary to manage his/her pain. And, as discussed earlier in this thread, IV administration allows more medication to circulate in the bloodstream before being metabolized and excreted. The major hazards of Dilaudid, like most narcotic analgesics are respiratory depression, apnea, circulatory depression, respiratory arrest, shock, and cardiac arrest, and therefore IV Dilaudid should be administered very slowly and the patient should be monitored closely (especially if it is given by IV route because once it's injected into the bloodstream, it's not like you can "take it back").
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#129228 - 04/24/06 11:18 AM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Journeyman
Registered: 10/28/04
Posts: 73
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Sorry, you're right. I knew that. Naloxone. But it's best if it's just given properly to begin with...right patient, right time, right dose, right drug,,,etc. Best to do it right the first time. Naloxone will not only reverse the adverse effects, but it will also reverse any pain relieving properties of it leaving the patient in pain. I hate to see patients hurting, but even worse, I also don't want to see the patient die. You are absolutely correct. There's such a bias in the mindset of nurses. If a patient complains of pain, they're almost automatically thought of as a drug abuser. Many nurses just don't get the fact that the patient really could actually be hurting. I've come on shift and the first thing a patient usually says to me is "can I have something for pain?" I find that 9 times out of 10, after assessing my patients and reading their charts, it's been well over the q3-4hrs as needed for pain. When the doctor writes the orders "as needed," most nurses tend to think this means "as needed if I think that they need it." Many patients trust their doctors and nurses to managed their pain in a logical manner and trust that if the doctor writes the order to administer as needed, this means as "needed by the patient." If the first thing my patients requests from me is something for pain (and there's been enough time since their last dose), I will go straight to the Pixis and get it for them. If I can help them manage their pain, they become more relaxed and most times they will be able to sleep which allows me more time to do the other things that I need to do (Alterior motives aren't always bad). Anyway, thanks for correcting me.
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#129231 - 06/04/06 03:19 PM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Journeyman
Registered: 06/01/06
Posts: 51
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Quote:
This forum is not to discuss suppliers. This thread is to discuss ------ and not the companies offering it.
Thank you for your support.
Edited by Melody (08/28/06 04:36 AM)
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#129241 - 11/23/06 07:16 PM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Threadhead
Registered: 12/01/05
Posts: 732
Loc: United States
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Regarding dilaudid, I have only had it orally and found it to be pretty poor. I have not received a buzz from any opiates in years, I guess because I have been on the oral opaites in one form or another weekly if not daily for at least 2 years. The good thing is that they still work for pain control!!! For me that is a plus, I am not trying to judge anyone else and what they may have done in the past, but I am glad I don't get a buzz so that I don't get psychologically addicted and wind up drug seeking. The added benefit is that they still help with the pain, even just good ole hydro helps wonderfully, espcially when I take it with an nsaid. Having said that, I am very very careful with benzos, they do make me feel "high". I don't want to go that route and wind up taking benzos recreationally so I try to stay away from them and when I have to take them, I try to get the doc to give me something less euphorogenic like valium or klonopin rather than xanax or ativan. Just my $.02
_________________________
"They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security," Benjamin Franklin
I am not a Real Doctor but I play one on DB
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#129243 - 11/25/06 01:54 PM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Stranger
Registered: 11/20/06
Posts: 2
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First post to DB. Really interesting and helpful.
I was in the hospital, and they were testing my heart with pumping dye into my thigh artery and taking pics of my heart. This later turned into a double bypass heart operation at 48 years old. Am doing very well.
Anyway, my point here, ist that they gave me a shot of Valium, a benzo, and I had one of the most terrific, euphoric rides in my life! Even though the tests on me was drop-dead serious, I was laughing and joking with the nurses and doctors and enjoyed the whole thing fully. It lasted an hour, and I was sorry to see it end.
I have taken valium orally, but have never had this feeling. I don't think it is possible to get this by pills, and how much mg's. But I wanted to share the fond memories of that injection with you all.
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#129247 - 01/04/07 02:08 PM
Re: Dilaudid (hydromorphone hydrochloride)
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Journeyman
Registered: 10/28/04
Posts: 73
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Nephro, what most people don't understand is that there really is no "max dose" on the strong IV pain medications that are given in the hospital. Nurses are only limited by the physicians in how much they can dose a patient in any given period of time. More time than not, the patient is undermedicated because many doctors and nurses rely more on medical journals and personal experience than they do on assessing their patient's response to pain control. I just think that if a person continues to complain of pain, and their respirations and heart rate are within normal limits, they should be believed and given the benefit of the doubt and dosed again or given something different. People are different and not all respond to the same dose, the same way. I mostly work on the post surgical unit and by the time we receive the patient from the recovery room, their pain is ususally under control. We set and connect the pca (patient controlled anesthesia) and show the patient how to use it. More times than not, the doctor has already written in the patients chart, extra doses for breakthrough pain even with the pca. Nurses are taught to look for objective data-resp rate, heart rate, etc.- when assessing the patient before administering all drugs, but a lot of them seem to forego real patient assessment when it comes to pain control and dose (or not dose) based on unfounded stereotypical and/or unjustified personal beliefs about the patient or the drug. Another thing that gets my goat with alot of nurses is their attitude when dealing with addicts. Are not addicts people too? When did we become the narcotic police? Suffering human beings are suffering human beings and just because someone has an addiction doesn't justify withholding pain control when it's needed. The excuse, "I don't want to be the one to contribute to his/her addiction," is just lame.
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