Opioids in Pain Control
Basic and Clinical Aspects
Christoph Stein
Published: 1999
Pages: 359
This book offers a comprehensive overview of the often controversial and confounding use of opioids in pain control. The volume informs scientists and clinicians of the unresolved clinical problems of using opioids for pain relief and the practical implications of such use. Written by an internationally recognized group of contributors, this book covers topics ranging from the molecular biology of opioid receptors and the basic pharmacology of endogenous and exogenous opioids to the clinical applications of opioids in acute and chronic pain. The contributors draw clinical correlations for important developments such as the cloning of the opioid receptors, the transplantation of opioid producing cells, the inhibition of opioid-degrading enzymes, antiopioids, and the peripheral effects in visceral and inflammatory pain. Clinically-oriented chapters include the application of opioids in malignant and nonmalignant chronic pain, preemptive analgesia, intra- and postoperative pain, obstetric, and visceral pain. Anesthesiologists, neurologists, oncologists, and all physicians and researchers with an interest in pain will find this to be an indispensable source of information.