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Morphine and Codeine:
Morphine exerts a narcotic action manifested by analgesia,
drowsiness, changes in mood, and mental clouding. The major medical
action of morphine sought in the CNS is analgesia.
Opiates suppress the "cough center" which is also
located in the brainstem, the medulla. Such an action is thought
to underlie the use of opiate narcotics as cough suppressants.
Codeine appears to be particularly effective in this action and
is widely used for this purpose.
Narcotic analgesics cause an addictive physical dependence.
If the drug is discontinued, withdrawal symptoms are experienced.
Although the reasons for addiction and withdrawal symptoms are
not completely known, recent experiments have provided some information.
A nucleotide known as cyclicadenosine monophosphate (cAMP) is
synthesized with the aid of the enzyme adenylate cyclase. Enkephalin
and morphine-like drugs inhibit this enzyme and thus decrease
the amount of cAMP in the cells. In order to compensate for the
decreased cAMP, the cells synthesize more enzyme in an attempt
to produce more cAMP. Since more enzyme has been produced, more
morphine is required as an inhibitor to keep the cAMP at a low
level. This cycle repeats itself causing an increase in the tolerance
level and increasing the amounts of morphine required. If morphine
is suddenly withheld, withdrawal symptoms are probably caused
by a high concentration of cAMP since the synthesizing enzyme,
adenylate cyclase, is no longer being inhibited.
Morphine and codeine are contained in opium from the poppy
(Papaver Somniterum) plant found in Turkey, Mexico, Southeast
Asia, China, and India. This plant is 3-4 feet tall with 5-8
egg shaped capsules on top. Ten days after the poppy blooms in
June, incisions are made in the capsules permitting a milky fluid
to ooze out. The following day the gummy mass (now brown) is
carefully scraped off and pressed into cakes of raw opium to
dry.
Opium contains over 20 compounds but only morphine (10%) and
codeine (0.5%) are of any importance. Morphine is extracted from
the opium and isolated in a relatively pure form. Since codeine
is in such low concentration, it is synthesized from morphine
by an ether-type methylation of an alcohol group. Codeine has
only a fraction of the potency compared to morphine. It is used
with aspirin and as a cough suppressant.
Credit: Poppies from: http://leda.lycaeum.org
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