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Opium: Difference between revisions

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{{MedTemplate
| generic          = opium
| brand            = Laudanum, Dropizol
| structure        = morphine.svg
| class            = Opioid, Analgesic, Sedative-Hypnotic
| mechanism        = µ-opioid agonism
| uses              = Pain, cough, disquiet
| formula          =
| mass              =
| cas              =
| atc              =
| routes            =
| onset            =
| duration          =
| halflife          =
| bioavailability  =
| pregnancy        =
| legal            =
| intro            =
| pharmacology      =
| pharmacokinetics  =
| indications      =
| dosing            =
| effects          =
| adverse          =
| interactions      = <pharmaInteractions/>
| pregnancy_details =
| monitoring        =
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}}
{{PendellsCorner
| quote  = The opium poppy is named for sleep: Somnus is the Roman name for Hypnos, the god of sleep. Nyx, the goddess of night, carries poppies in her hand, while her son, Thanatos, death, wears a poppy garland. Hermes, the shaman god who travels between the worlds, carries a staff that brings sleep. His home was Mekone, "poppy town," the place where Prometheus stole fire.
| volume = Poeia
| page  = 125
}}
 
[[Category:Euphorica]]
[[Category:Plants]]
[[Category:Natural opioids]]
[[Category:Mu-Opioid Receptor Agonists]]
[[Category:Opioids]]

Latest revision as of 00:38, 22 May 2026

opium
Laudanum, Dropizol

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Structure of opium
Summary
Pharmacy
Pharmacology
Purported mechanism
µ-opioid agonism
Pendell's corner
The opium poppy is named for sleep: Somnus is the Roman name for Hypnos, the god of sleep. Nyx, the goddess of night, carries poppies in her hand, while her son, Thanatos, death, wears a poppy garland. Hermes, the shaman god who travels between the worlds, carries a staff that brings sleep. His home was Mekone, "poppy town," the place where Prometheus stole fire.
— Dale Pendell, Pharmako/Poeia, p. 125