Intern Pocket Cards - Pharmacologic Pain Management Options
Anti-inflammatory:
• Acetaminophen (24 hours: < 3-4g in healthy adults, <3g in CKD, <2g in liver disease or cirrhosis)
• Oral NSAIDs or IV ketorolac (avoid NSAIDs if CKD or >2 of the following risk factors: history of GI ulcer, age >60, on steroids, on ASA/anticoagulation)
• Opioid: Hydrocodone, morphine, oxycodone, hydromorphone, fentanyl, tramadol, codeine
• Topical: Lidocaine patch, menthol cream, lidocaine/prilocaine cream, capsaicin cream
• Neuropathic agents: Gabapentin, pregabalin, SNRIs, TCAs
• Anti-spasmodic: Baclofen, cyclobenzaprine, tizanidine
Opioid Equianalgesia Conversion Table:
• Morphine 10 IV, 25 PO
• Hydromorphone 2 IV, 5 PO
• Oxycodone 20 PO
• Hydrocodone 25 PO
• Codeine 100 IV, 200 PO
• Fentanyl 0.15 IV
• Tramadol 100 IV, 120 PO
Dr. Satya Patel @SatyaPatelMD
Full Inpatient Pocket Cards Collection: https://bit.ly/pocketcardset
#Pain #Opioid #Conversion #Table #Ladder #medications #pharmacology #agents #internship #guide #comparison
The Acute Care Opioid Table - For Emergency Providers
There are a hundred opioid tables out there, but none of them are designed for emergency providers, so we made our own: The Acute Care Opioid Table. Including ketamine, because no opioid table is complete without the non-opioid, ketamine.
PO Morphine,
PO Hydromorphone,
PO Hydrocodone,
PO Oxycodone,
PO Codeine,
PO Tramadol,
IV Morphine,
IV Fentanyl,
IV Hydromorphone,
IN Fentanyl,
BAN Fentanyl,
BAN Morphine,
IV/IM Buprenorphine,
SL Buprenorphine,
IV Ketamine,
IN Ketamine
#Opioid #Pain #Dosing #Acute #Management #Table #Pharmacology #Emergency