Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9366742 | Pathologie Biologie | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Morphine and meperidine in Patient-Controlled Analgesic devices are commonly used to treat chronic pain patients. These devices deliver a programmed amount of drug and allow self-administration by the patient depending on the pain. In our department of pharmacy, 300 devices were manufactured in 2003. The aim of this study was to assess their shelf-life. The devices were filled aseptically and without preservatives with 1 and 40Â mg/ml morphine solution and 5 and 20Â mg/ml meperidine and stored over 30Â days at room temperature and protected from light. Culture assay of the solutions showed that they remained sterile for 30Â days. No turbidity of any solutions from samples collected twice a week was noticed. pH and osmolarity remained constant. Drug concentrations were determined using stability indicating HPLC method, as we showed that degradation products can be separated from the drugs. Little loss of meperidine occured within 21Â days (<5%) and morphine concentration, which increased, because of solvent evaporation, remained lower than 5% within 21Â days but increased up to 10% after 30Â days. No traces of degradation products (pseudomorphine or pethidic acid) were detected. The physicochemical and microbiological stability of morphine and meperidine hydrochlorides stored in such devices has been established for 21Â days at room temperature and protected from light.
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Authors
I. Laville, L. Mercier, E. Chachaty, P. Bourget, A. Paci,