A patient is receiving morphine sulfate intravenously via a patient controlled analgesia (PCA) pump

A patient is receiving morphine sulfate intravenously via a patient controlled analgesia (PCA) pump. The concentration of the solution is 15 mg/mL and is being infused at a rate of 0.1 mL/h. The patient may access a 2-mg bolus dose every hour for breakthrough pain and is currently using an average of 8 doses per day. The patient’s caregiver requests that the patient be converted to oxycodone oral tablets given every 4 hours. Calculate the appropriate dose of oral oxycodone using the dosing tablets used in class. Round to the tenths place and use the appropriate units. None QUESTION 10 A patient is receiving morphine sulfate intravenously via a patient controlled analgesia (PCA) pump. The concentration of the solution is 15 mg/mL and is being infused at a rate of 0.1 mL/h. The patient may access a 2-mg bolus dose every hour for breakthrough pain and is currently using an average of 8 doses per day. The patient’s caregiver requests that the patient be converted to oxycodone oral tablets given every 4 hours. Calculate the appropriate dose of oral oxycodone using the dosing tablets used in class. Round to the tenths place and use the appropriate units.

The correct answer and explanation is:

Answer

The appropriate dose of oral oxycodone to administer every 4 hours is 10 mg.


Calculation and Explanation

1. Determine total daily morphine dose (IV):

  • Continuous infusion dose:
    • Morphine concentration: 15 mg/mL.
    • Infusion rate: 0.1 mL/h.
    • Morphine infused per hour: 15 mg/mL×0.1 mL/h=1.5 mg/h15 \, \text{mg/mL} \times 0.1 \, \text{mL/h} = 1.5 \, \text{mg/h}.
    • Total infusion dose in 24 hours: 1.5 mg/h×24 h=36 mg/day.1.5 \, \text{mg/h} \times 24 \, \text{h} = 36 \, \text{mg/day}.
  • Bolus dose:
    • Dose per bolus: 2 mg.
    • Average boluses per day: 8 doses.
    • Total bolus dose in 24 hours: 2 mg/bolus×8 boluses=16 mg/day.2 \, \text{mg/bolus} \times 8 \, \text{boluses} = 16 \, \text{mg/day}.
  • Total daily IV morphine dose:
    • 36 mg/day (infusion)+16 mg/day (bolus)=52 mg/day.36 \, \text{mg/day (infusion)} + 16 \, \text{mg/day (bolus)} = 52 \, \text{mg/day}.

2. Convert IV morphine to oral morphine:

  • Conversion factor for IV to oral morphine: 1:31:3.
  • Oral morphine dose: 52 mg/day×3=156 mg/day.52 \, \text{mg/day} \times 3 = 156 \, \text{mg/day}.

3. Convert oral morphine to oral oxycodone:

  • Conversion factor for oral morphine to oral oxycodone: 1:1.51:1.5.
  • Oral oxycodone dose: 156 mg/day÷1.5=104 mg/day.156 \, \text{mg/day} \div 1.5 = 104 \, \text{mg/day}.

4. Determine oxycodone dose every 4 hours:

  • Dosing frequency: every 4 hours (66 doses/day).
  • Dose per administration: 104 mg/day÷6=17.3 mg104 \, \text{mg/day} \div 6 = 17.3 \, \text{mg}.
  • Round to the nearest dose appropriate for tablets (e.g., 10 mg or 15 mg tablets are standard). The closest dose is 10 mg every 4 hours.

5. Rationale for the calculation:

  • Accurate conversion ensures effective pain control without over-sedation.
  • Conversion factors account for differing bioavailability and potency between morphine (IV and oral) and oxycodone.
  • Oxycodone’s frequent dosing interval helps manage continuous and breakthrough pain.

Always verify with prescribing guidelines or adjust for individual patient needs as required.

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