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Cardiovascular Response to Large Doses of Intravenous Morphine in Man

List of authors.
  • Edward Lowenstein, M.D.,
  • Phillips Hallowell, M.D.,
  • Frederick H. Levine, M.D.,
  • Willard M. Daggett, M.D.,
  • W. Gerald Austen, M.D.,
  • and Myron B. Laver, M.D.

Abstract

Large doses of intravenous morphine (0.5 to 3.0 mg per kilogram of body weight) were used alone or in combination with inhalation anesthetic agents for anesthesia in over 1100 patients undergoing open-heart surgery.

Morphine, 1 mg per kilogram, was administered intravenously to seven subjects with aortic-valve disease and eight without major heart or lung disease. The cardiac subjects had higher control pulse rates and lower control stroke indexes than the normal subjects. In the cardiac but not in the normal subjects, significant increases in cardiac index, stroke index, central venous pressure, and pulmonary-artery pressure, and a significant decrease in systemic vascular resistance, were observed after morphine was administered, suggesting that large doses of morphine may be used with safety in patients with minimal circulatory reserve.

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by grants (HE 08043. HE 06664 and GM 15904–2) from the United States Public Health Service (Dr. Daggett is the recipient of a fellowship from the Medical Foundation, Inc.).

Author Affiliations

* From the Anesthesia Laboratory and the Department of Surgery, Harvard Medical School, and the Anaesthesia and General Surgical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital (address reprint requests to Dr. Lowenstein at the Department of Anaesthesia, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass. 02114).

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