fentanyl

What Parents Should Know About Naloxone, a Medication That Reverses Opioid Poisoning or Overdose

Author/s: 
Barbara H Chaiyachati, Rachel E Linstead, Lindsay A Thompson

This JAMA Pediatrics Patient Page describes naloxone, a medication that reverses opioid poisoning or overdose.

Drug Threat Bulletin: DSUVIA (Sufentanil)

Author/s: 
Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved DSUVIA, the synthetic opioid sufentanil in tiny blue tablet form, on Nov. 2, 2018 for single doses ingested under the tongue. Sufentanil is chemically similar to fentanyl (the lethal narcotic showing up as fake oxycodone pills and as a cutting agent in heroin) but estimated to be five to 10 times stronger. The opioid has been administered in solution form via IV and epidural injection since 1984, and typically employed as an anesthesia during major surgery (high dose) and in low-dosages as part of pain-relieving regimen for general surgery. (ROCIC Drug Publication)

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