What it is (core concept)
- Fentanyl is a strong opioid (µ-opioid receptor agonist) used for analgesia and to reduce the stress response to surgery and airway instrumentation.
- Very potent: roughly 100 times as potent as morphine (so doses are in micrograms, not milligrams).
- Highly lipid soluble → fast onset after IV dosing; can accumulate with repeated doses/infusions (context-sensitive half-time increases).
Common uses in anaesthesia (first-time scenarios)
- Induction: reduce response to laryngoscopy/intubation and provide early analgesia.
- Intra-op analgesia: boluses or infusion as part of balanced anaesthesia (often alongside volatile/TIVA).
- Procedural sedation/analgesia: only with appropriate monitoring and airway skills immediately available (risk of apnoea).
- Post-op pain: less common as a standalone ward analgesic; more often in theatre/recovery or via PCA/infusion in selected settings.
Dosing (practical starting points — always individualise)
- Typical IV bolus for induction/analgesia: 0.5–2 micrograms/kg (often given in small increments).
- Blunting intubation response: commonly 1–3 micrograms/kg IV given a few minutes before laryngoscopy (balance against hypotension/apnoea).
- Incremental top-ups intra-op: e.g., 25–50 micrograms IV at a time, titrated to clinical signs and surgical stimulus.
- Reduced doses in: older/frail patients, hypovolaemia, significant cardiorespiratory disease, and when combined with other sedatives (propofol, benzodiazepines).
Onset, duration, and what you’ll see
- IV onset: usually within 1–2 minutes; peak effect often around 3–5 minutes (plan timing before stimulation).
- Single bolus duration: around 30–60 minutes for analgesic effect, but respiratory depression may outlast perceived analgesia.
- Expected effects: analgesia, reduced sympathetic response (lower HR/BP), sedation, respiratory depression, cough suppression.
Side effects (what to anticipate and manage)
- Respiratory depression/apnoea: dose-related; risk increases with other sedatives and in opioid-naïve patients.
- Bradycardia and hypotension: more likely with higher doses, vagal stimulus, or co-induction agents.
- Chest wall rigidity (rare but important): can make ventilation difficult, usually with rapid/high-dose IV administration; treat with neuromuscular blockade and ventilation support.
- Nausea/vomiting, pruritus, urinary retention: typical opioid effects (often more relevant post-op).
- Reduced gut motility/constipation: consider in post-op prescribing.
Monitoring and safety essentials
- Always use appropriate monitoring: ECG, NIBP, SpO2; capnography is essential whenever ventilation may be affected (including sedation).
- Give in small, titrated increments; allow time to see peak effect before re-dosing.
- Be ready to support airway/ventilation: oxygen, bag-mask ventilation, airway adjuncts, and escalation plan.
- Document dose (micrograms), time, and response; communicate total opioid given to recovery staff.
Preparation and administration (avoiding errors)
- Common concentration: 50 micrograms/mL (check local presentation; some areas have different strengths).
- Label syringes clearly and keep opioids separate from induction agents to reduce swap errors.
- State dose in micrograms and micrograms/kg; avoid ambiguous shorthand (e.g., avoid writing just “fentanyl 2”).
- Give slowly in most routine cases; rapid bolus increases risk of apnoea and rigidity.
Reversal and rescue (naloxone basics)
- Naloxone reverses opioid effects (including respiratory depression).
- Use small, titrated doses to restore adequate ventilation while avoiding severe pain, agitation, hypertension, or acute withdrawal in opioid-tolerant patients.
- Naloxone duration may be shorter than fentanyl effect → monitor for re-sedation and consider repeat dosing/infusion as per local guidance.
Special situations (intro level)
- Elderly/frail: start low, go slow; increased sensitivity and higher risk of hypotension and respiratory depression.
- Obesity/OSA: higher risk of airway obstruction and post-op respiratory events; careful titration and enhanced monitoring in recovery.
- Renal impairment: fentanyl is generally less affected than morphine by active metabolite accumulation, but clinical effect still varies—titrate to effect.
- Haemodynamic instability: fentanyl can be useful (minimal histamine release), but high doses can still cause bradycardia and hypotension.
What class of drug is fentanyl and why do we use it?
– Potent opioid analgesic (µ-receptor agonist) – Provides analgesia and blunts sympathetic responses to painful stimuli (e.g., laryngoscopy, incision)
What’s a typical induction dose for a new starter to think about?
– Often 0.5–2 micrograms/kg IV, titrated – Use lower doses in elderly/frail or when giving lots of propofol/other sedatives
How quickly does IV fentanyl work and when does it peak?
– Onset usually within 1–2 minutes – Peak effect often around 3–5 minutes (important for timing before intubation/incision)
What is the main immediate danger after giving fentanyl?
– Respiratory depression/apnoea – Airway obstruction (especially with sedation or OSA) – Always be ready to ventilate and use capnography
Why can the patient become bradycardic after fentanyl?
– Opioids can increase vagal tone and reduce sympathetic drive – Risk increases with high doses, other anaesthetic agents, and vagal stimuli (e.g., laryngoscopy, peritoneal traction)
What is chest wall rigidity and what should I do?
– Rare: difficulty ventilating after rapid/high-dose fentanyl – Call for help, ensure oxygenation, consider neuromuscular blockade and controlled ventilation
What concentration is commonly used and why does it matter?
– Often 50 micrograms/mL (check local) – Prevents dosing errors: doses are in micrograms; always confirm concentration before drawing up
When would you consider naloxone?
– Significant opioid-induced respiratory depression not improving with stimulation/airway manoeuvres – Titrate small doses; monitor for re-sedation because naloxone may wear off first
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