Safety of Chronic Intrathecal Morphine Infusion in a Sheep Model

Author:

Gradert Tamara Lee1,Baze Wallace B.2,Satterfield William C.3,Hildebrand Keith R.4,Johansen Mary J.5,Hassenbusch Samuel J.6

Affiliation:

1. Senior Research Assistant.

2. Associate Professor, Associate Veterinary Pathologist, and Section Chief, Veterinary Pathology.

3. Associate Professor of Comparative Medicine and Section Chief, Large Animal and Land Management, Department of Veterinary Sciences.

4. Staff Scientist, Drug Delivery Ventures, Medtronic, Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota.

5. Assistant Professor Cancer Medicine, Department of Experimental Therapeutics.

6. Professor, Department of Neurosurgery, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.

Abstract

Background The safety of chronically administered intrathecal morphine has been questioned. Therefore, the authors examined the behavioral and neurologic effects and neurotoxicity of continuous intrathecal morphine administration in sheep. Methods Groups of three sheep were implanted with intrathecal infusion systems for the continuous administration of morphine (3, 6, 9, 12, or 18 mg/day) or saline at a fixed infusion rate of 1.92 ml/day beginning approximately 7 days after implantation. Sheep were examined daily for any changes in behavior or neurologic function. After 28-30 days, the animals were humanely killed. Cerebrospinal fluid samples were collected and analyzed for protein, erythrocytes and leukocytes, and morphine content. The spinal cord and meninges with the catheter in situ was removed en bloc and fixed in formalin for histologic analysis. Results Unilateral hind-leg gait deficits were observed in two of three animals in each of the 12- and 18-mg/day dose groups. Gross and microscopic evaluation of spinal cord tissue from these animals revealed intradural-extramedullary inflammatory masses that compressed the spinal cord at the catheter-tip and mid-catheter areas. This inflammation was ipsilateral to extremities that exhibited gait deficits and had acute and chronic cellular components. Conclusions The toxicity of intrathecal morphine seems to be dependent on the amount of morphine infused, although the effects of dose versus concentration cannot be clearly distinguished in this study. Intrathecal morphine doses of 12- 18 mg/day produced inflammatory masses extending from the catheter tip down the length of the catheter within the subarachnoid space. Doses of 6-9 mg/day produced mild-to-moderate inflammation 5 cm cranial to the catheter tip. A dose of 3 mg/day produced no neurotoxicity and spinal histopathologic changes that were equivalent to those observed in the saline-treated animals.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference39 articles.

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