#61: oxycodone (Roxicodone) | Treatment of Moderate to Severe Pain
Description
Oxycodone also is known as Roxicodone or as the extended release abuse deterrent formulations Oxycontin and Xtampza. The most common use for oxycodone is in the treatment of moderate to severe pain. When treating patients it is important to determine if the patient is opioid-naïve or opioid experienced. Opioid-naïve patients are doses at the lowest effective dose for the shortest effective duration. Initiating dosing is around 5-15 mg PO q4-6h prn. Opioid-experienced patients are dosed based on their current opioid intake and converted using the most current nomograms. There are multiple black box warnings and extreme caution and monitoring should be exercised when prescribing. The most common side effects are constipation, dizziness, fever, anxiety and confusion. Some serious side effects are abuse, dependency, seizures, and respiratory depression.
Amazon Affiliate link: https://amzn.to/31OkKVe for NAPLEX Math Review: The Foundation of a Logical NAPLEX Prep Strategy.
FREE Drug Card Sheet is available for this episode at DrugCardsDaily.com along with ALL past FREE drug card sheets! Please SUBSCRIBE, FOLLOW, and RATE on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever your favorite place to listen to podcasts are. I’d really appreciate hearing from you! Leave a voice message at anchor.fm/drugcardsdaily or find me on most all socials @drugcardsdaily or send an email to contact.drugcardsdaily@gmail.com to leave feedback, request a drug, or say hello!
DISCLAIMER: This content may contain sponsored content or the use of affiliate links. Partnerships, sponsorships, and the use of affiliate links provide monetary commissions for Drug Cards Daily at no cost to you! This is done in order to keep providing as much free content to everyone that comes to Drug Cards Daily. Thanks for your support! Drug Cards Daily provides drug information for educational and entertainment use. The information provided is not intended to be a sole source of drug information that is to be acted upon for patient care. If there are drug-related patient care concerns please contact your primary care Physician or local Pharmacist.
---
Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/drugcardsdaily/support