Palliative Care and Pain Management TAS

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1 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 16-year-old adolescent with a known life-limiting condition is receiving palliative care. Over the last few hours, they have developed severe and distressing air hunger.

To alleviate this, the attending consultant administers a dose of morphine. The primary intention is to relieve the patient's breathlessness, accepting that a foreseen but unintended consequence may be respiratory depression.

Which ethical principle best justifies this clinical decision?

2 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 7-year-old girl receiving end-of-life care is no longer able to take her regular oral morphine for pain. A decision is made to start a continuous subcutaneous morphine infusion.

Her total daily oral morphine requirement was 60 mg. The new subcutaneous infusion is prescribed at a dose of 30 mg over 24 hours.

What is the pharmacokinetic principle that explains this 2:1 conversion ratio?

3 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl with a known palliative diagnosis is reviewed for optimisation of her analgesia. Due to intractable nausea and difficulty swallowing, her medication is converted from oral morphine solution to a transdermal Fentanyl patch.

Which pharmacokinetic property of Fentanyl is most critical for its efficacy via this route of administration?

4 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl with decompensated cirrhosis is admitted for palliative care. She is experiencing significant pain requiring opioid analgesia.

The consultant advises against the use of codeine.

What is the primary pharmacokinetic reason for avoiding this medication?

5 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with stage 5 chronic kidney disease is transitioned to palliative care. Her estimated glomerular filtration rate is less than 15 mL/min/1.73m².

The palliative care team decides to commence morphine for analgesia but plans to titrate the dose with caution.

The cautious titration of morphine is primarily necessitated by the renal accumulation of which active, analgesic metabolite?

6 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with metastatic neuroblastoma is reviewed on the oncology ward due to intractable bone pain. Her pain is localised to her right femur and is not responding to escalating doses of regular oral morphine.

The palliative care team recommends adding ibuprofen to her analgesic regimen.

What is the primary mechanism by which ibuprofen will provide additional analgesia in this clinical context?

7 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl with spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy is reviewed in the neurodisability clinic. Her management includes an intrathecal baclofen pump, which has significantly reduced her painful muscle spasms and improved her functional ability.

The therapeutic effect of baclofen is mediated by its action on which molecular target?

8 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic for a six-month history of a persistent, burning sensation in her right lower limb. The symptoms developed following a minor traumatic injury and have been resistant to standard simple analgesia.

A clinical diagnosis of neuropathic pain is established, and a trial of low-dose amitriptyline is initiated.

What is the principal mechanism responsible for the analgesic effect of this medication in this context?

9 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric oncology clinic following completion of her chemotherapy regimen. She describes a persistent, burning pain in her hands and feet, consistent with peripheral neuropathy.

The patient is commenced on gabapentin for management of her symptoms.

Gabapentin exerts its therapeutic effect by binding to which of the following structures?

10 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 7-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric oncology clinic for persistent, severe constipation. She is prescribed regular oral morphine for analgesia, and her symptoms have not improved despite the use of a stool softener.

The registrar initiates treatment with Senna.

What is the biochemical mechanism of action of this prodrug?

11 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 7-year-old girl is reviewed on the ward five days after surgery for a femoral fracture. She is receiving regular morphine for analgesia and has not opened her bowels since the operation.

On examination, her abdomen is soft but distended, and she appears to be in discomfort. The Paediatric Registrar prescribes lactulose.

What is the principal mechanism of action of this medication?

12 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 4-year-old girl with a complex life-limiting condition is receiving end-of-life care. Over the past 48 hours, she has developed severe terminal agitation and intractable nausea, which have been refractory to standard therapies.

After consultation with the palliative care team, she is commenced on levomepromazine, which results in a significant improvement in her symptoms.

Which of the following best explains the pharmacological basis for this drug's broad efficacy in palliative care?

13 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old boy with a known life-limiting neurodegenerative condition is receiving palliative care on the ward. He becomes increasingly agitated and develops tonic-clonic seizures.

Following a discussion with his family and the palliative care team, he is administered intravenous midazolam, which successfully terminates the seizure activity and provides sedation.

What is the primary molecular mechanism of action of the administered medication?

14 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with a posterior fossa medulloblastoma is reviewed by the palliative care team. She was recently started on high-dose dexamethasone to manage headaches secondary to vasogenic oedema.

Her parents report a noticeable improvement in her headache, and also that she requires less breakthrough analgesia for her generalised somatic pain.

Besides its effect on vasogenic oedema, which of the following best describes an additional analgesic mechanism of dexamethasone?

15 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl presents to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a history of intermittent, colicky abdominal pain. Following a clinical assessment, a diagnosis of visceral pain secondary to bowel spasm is made.

She is administered hyoscine butylbromide, which results in a significant improvement in her symptoms.

What is the primary mechanism of action of the administered drug?

16 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl with metastatic neuroblastoma is receiving palliative care. She develops distressing respiratory secretions and terminal agitation.

Following the administration of subcutaneous hyoscine hydrobromide, there is a noticeable reduction in her secretions and she becomes profoundly sedated. The registrar notes that while glycopyrrolate is also effective for secretion control, it does not have the same sedative properties.

What is the pharmacological property of hyoscine hydrobromide that accounts for this additional central nervous system effect?

17 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy is receiving palliative care for a terminal condition. He develops audible, moist respiratory secretions, causing distress to his family.

The team administers glycopyrronium bromide to manage this.

Which of the following best describes the molecular mechanism of action of this medication?

18 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 6-year-old boy is reviewed in the General Paediatric clinic ahead of a planned family holiday involving a long ferry journey. He has a significant history of debilitating travel sickness, which has previously limited family activities.

The consultant prescribes cyclizine for him to take before travelling.

What is the primary mechanism of action of this medication in the context of motion sickness?

19 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl is on the paediatric ward, receiving intravenous morphine for post-operative pain following a complex orthopaedic procedure. She develops persistent nausea, which is successfully treated with a dose of intravenous haloperidol.

What is the primary mechanism of action responsible for this drug's anti-emetic effect?

20 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy is reviewed on the paediatric oncology ward following a cycle of chemotherapy. He develops severe, acute-onset nausea and is administered intravenous ondansetron.

Which of the following best describes the molecular mechanism of action of this antiemetic agent?

21 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric chronic pain clinic. She is being considered for treatment with a tricyclic antidepressant to manage her complex regional pain syndrome.

The consultant explains that the therapeutic effect is achieved by enhancing the activity of descending inhibitory pathways from the brainstem to the spinal cord. These pathways modulate nociceptive signals at the dorsal horn through the release of which two principal neurotransmitters?

22 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric oncology clinic, several months after completing a course of chemotherapy. She describes a persistent burning sensation in both of her feet.

During the examination, she reports that light touch with a piece of cotton wool to the affected area is intensely painful.

What is the primary neurophysiological mechanism responsible for her symptoms?

23 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 9-year-old boy is brought to the urgent care centre. He returned from a beach holiday yesterday and has developed intensely painful, red skin on his back.

His mother reports that he is crying and will not let his t-shirt touch the area, a sensation he normally tolerates.

Which of the following molecular mechanisms is the most likely cause of this child's heightened pain sensitivity?

24 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic due to persistent pain three months after a minor limb fracture. On examination, she experiences significant distress from light touch over the affected area, a phenomenon known as allodynia.

This clinical picture is consistent with central sensitisation, a state of dorsal horn hyperexcitability that is NMDA-receptor dependent. The activation of these receptors is driven primarily by which excitatory neurotransmitter?

25 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 6-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric A&E after bumping his elbow. He tells the assessing nurse that the pain is significantly reduced when he instinctively rubs the affected area.

This clinical observation is explained by the Gate Control Theory of pain.

What is the physiological mechanism in the dorsal horn responsible for this effect?

26 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy is brought to A&E with an eight-hour history of abdominal pain. He describes a dull, constant ache situated around the umbilicus.

On examination, his abdomen is soft with no localised tenderness or signs of peritonism.

What is the neurophysiological explanation for the periumbilical location of his pain?

27 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 9-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department after falling off his bicycle. He has a painful graze on his left knee.

The afferent nerve fibres that transmit this pain sensation are part of the spinothalamic tract.

At which anatomical level do the second-order neurons of this tract decussate?

28 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old boy presents to the Accident & Emergency department with severe leg pain after falling from his skateboard. An X-ray confirms a closed fracture of the right tibia.

The specific sensory pathway that transmits the sharp, localised pain signals from the dorsal horn of the spinal cord to the thalamus is which of the following?

29 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with a known diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease presents to the paediatric clinic. She describes a persistent, cramping abdominal pain which she finds difficult to localise.

Her mother explains that the child has described the sensation as a 'slow, burning' ache.

The afferent pathway mediating this type of visceral pain is predominantly composed of which nerve fibre?

30 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 5-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department after touching a hot iron. Her mother states she pulled her hand away instantly, crying out from a sharp, sudden pain.

This was followed by a more persistent, dull, throbbing discomfort.

The initial, sharp sensation is mediated by which type of nerve fibre?

31 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic two weeks after being commenced on gabapentin for neuropathic pain. She reports feeling persistently drowsy and occasionally dizzy, which is attributed to the medication's central nervous system effects.

The mechanism of action responsible for these side effects involves the drug binding to which of the following targets?

32 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old child, known to have spastic cerebral palsy, is reviewed in a specialist clinic for the management of focal spasticity in their lower limbs. They are administered botulinum toxin injections directly into the affected muscles. This intervention aims to improve function and delay the need for orthopaedic surgery by causing a localised and temporary muscle paralysis.

The therapeutic effect of this toxin is achieved by preventing the fusion of presynaptic vesicles at the neuromuscular junction.

This action blocks the release of which neurotransmitter?

33 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old boy is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic. He was recently commenced on amitriptyline for the management of complex regional pain syndrome.

During the consultation, he reports experiencing a persistently dry mouth, intermittent blurring of his vision, and constipation over the past two weeks.

The development of these symptoms is primarily mediated by the blockade of which of the following receptors?

34 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old girl is brought to the A&E department four hours after an intentional paracetamol overdose. Following initial assessment and correlation of her blood results with a treatment nomogram, an intravenous infusion of N-acetylcysteine is commenced.

What is the primary biochemical mechanism of action of the initiated treatment?

35 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department several hours after a significant paracetamol overdose. In this situation, the primary hepatic metabolic pathways of glucuronidation and sulphation are saturated.

An alternative pathway involving the cytochrome P450 system produces a highly reactive metabolite that depletes intracellular glutathione, leading to hepatocellular necrosis.

Which of the following is the toxic metabolite responsible for this mechanism of liver injury?

36 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old boy with known haemophilia A presents to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a painful, swollen right knee after a minor fall. The registrar advises against prescribing non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for analgesia due to the risk of exacerbating bleeding.

What is the primary haematological mechanism for this contraindication?

37 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl is reviewed on the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a 48-hour history of vomiting and diarrhoea. Her parents have been administering ibuprofen for associated fever.

On examination, she is clinically dehydrated and has had a reduced urine output. Blood tests confirm a new acute kidney injury.

What is the primary haemodynamic mechanism responsible for this deterioration in renal function?

38 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric rheumatology clinic for her ongoing management of Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. Her treatment regimen includes long-term ibuprofen, which has provided good control of her joint inflammation.

She now presents with a new complaint of persistent epigastric pain.

What is the biochemical basis for this adverse effect?

39 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl, receiving palliative care for metastatic neuroblastoma, is administered regular oral morphine for pain management. She subsequently develops persistent nausea and vomiting.

This side effect is known to be caused by the direct stimulation of mu-opioid and dopamine receptors in a specific central nervous system structure that lies outside the blood-brain barrier.

Which of the following is the anatomical location responsible?

40 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 4-year-old child is on the paediatric ward receiving intravenous opiates for post-operative analgesia. On review, you note the child is drowsy and has bilateral pinpoint pupils.

This clinical finding is a result of opioid-induced disinhibition of which parasympathetic cranial nerve nucleus?

41 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy with chronic kidney disease (eGFR 20 mL/min/1.73m²) is being managed on the paediatric ward. He was commenced on a morphine infusion for post-operative analgesia 24 hours ago.

The nursing staff report that he has become increasingly agitated and confused. On examination, you note intermittent myoclonic jerks of his limbs.

These clinical features are most likely caused by the accumulation of which renally-excreted metabolite?

42 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old boy with complex pain secondary to cerebral palsy is managed with a continuous morphine infusion. He develops severe constipation, which is refractory to standard laxatives.

Following the administration of methylnaltrexone, his bowel function improves significantly without any change in his pain score.

Which of the following pharmacological properties best explains this selective clinical effect?

43 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old boy with a complex underlying diagnosis is receiving long-term palliative care. He is prescribed regular oral morphine, which has successfully managed his pain, but he has subsequently developed severe constipation.

What is the direct physiological mechanism responsible for this gastrointestinal side effect?

44 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 3-year-old boy is brought to the A&E department with a reduced level of consciousness after being found with his grandmother's oral morphine solution. On assessment, he is unresponsive to voice and has a respiratory rate of 4 breaths per minute.

Following the administration of intravenous naloxone, his respiratory rate improves to 20 breaths per minute within 60 seconds.

Which of the following best describes the molecular mechanism of action of the administered drug?

45 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 5-year-old girl is admitted to the paediatric ward for management of a painful vaso-occlusive sickle cell crisis. She is commenced on a continuous intravenous morphine infusion for analgesia.

During a routine nursing assessment, she is noted to have a respiratory rate of 6 breaths per minute.

Which of the following best describes the primary neurophysiological mechanism responsible for this clinical finding?

46 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl with spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy is reviewed in the neurodisability clinic. Her muscle tone is managed by a continuous intrathecal baclofen infusion, which has successfully reduced her spasticity.

The therapeutic effect is achieved by inhibiting the spinal reflex arc.

What is the molecular target of this medication?

47 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl with metastatic osteosarcoma is reviewed by the paediatric palliative care team due to severe, intractable pain. Her symptoms have been refractory to escalating doses of morphine.

A decision is made to commence treatment with methadone.

In addition to its action as a mu-opioid agonist, which other mechanism contributes to methadone's efficacy in managing this type of complex pain?

48 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 7-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department after falling and sustaining a deep laceration to her chin. The registrar infiltrates the wound edges with Lidocaine prior to suturing to provide local anaesthesia.

Which of the following best describes the primary mechanism by which this agent prevents the sensation of pain?

49 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 4-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a deep laceration to her chin sustained during a fall. After assessment, the decision is made to close the wound with sutures.

A local anaesthetic solution containing lidocaine is administered via infiltration around the wound margins.

What is the principal molecular target of this anaesthetic agent?

50 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the tertiary paediatric pain clinic for management of complex regional pain syndrome affecting her left foot. Despite intensive physiotherapy and neuropathic agents, her pain remains severe and is impacting her mobility.

A decision is made to commence an infusion of ketamine to modulate the process of central sensitisation.

What is the principal molecular target of this agent?

51 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic due to a three-month history of persistent burning and shooting pains in her right foot, which started after a minor ankle sprain. Her symptoms have been unresponsive to regular paracetamol and ibuprofen.

A decision is made to commence treatment with low-dose amitriptyline.

What is the primary mechanism of action responsible for this drug's analgesic effect?

52 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric pain clinic six months following spinal fusion surgery. She reports a persistent, burning pain and an unpleasant sensitivity to light touch over the surgical site.

A diagnosis of neuropathic pain was made, and she was commenced on gabapentin, which has significantly improved her symptoms.

Which of the following best describes the mechanism of action for this medication?

53 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric oncology clinic. She has recently completed a course of chemotherapy and describes a persistent, burning pain in her hands and feet, consistent with neuropathic pain.

Her consultant initiates treatment with Gabapentin. Although structurally analogous to the neurotransmitter GABA, this drug does not exert its therapeutic effect via GABA receptors.

Which of the following is the primary molecular target of this medication?

54 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy is admitted to the ward with a 48-hour history of vomiting and diarrhoea. He is clinically dehydrated and has been receiving regular ibuprofen from his parents for fever.

On admission, blood tests confirm a significant acute kidney injury.

What is the primary mechanism responsible for the ibuprofen-induced deterioration in his renal function?

55 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 9-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric rheumatology clinic, six months after being diagnosed with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. Her joint symptoms have been well-controlled with a regular therapeutic dose of Ibuprofen.

Over the past month, she has developed intermittent epigastric discomfort.

What is the primary biochemical mechanism underlying this adverse effect?

56 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 7-year-old boy with a known diagnosis of haemophilia A is brought to the Paediatric A&E following a fall. On examination, he has a painful and swollen right elbow.

The attending registrar is considering appropriate analgesia.

What is the primary mechanism by which Ibuprofen would increase this child's bleeding risk?

57 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric rheumatology clinic for her ongoing management of Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. She is currently taking Ibuprofen, which has helped to reduce the swelling and pain in her joints.

This therapeutic effect is achieved by inhibiting the synthesis of pro-inflammatory prostaglandins from arachidonic acid.

Which enzyme is the primary target of this medication?

58 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 15-year-old girl is brought to the A&E department four hours after an intentional paracetamol overdose. Her plasma paracetamol concentration plots above the treatment line on a standard nomogram.

The on-call Paediatric Registrar commences an intravenous infusion of N-acetylcysteine.

What is the principal biochemical mechanism by which this antidote prevents hepatocellular injury?

59 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department several hours after taking a significant overdose of paracetamol. The mechanism of toxicity involves the saturation of glucuronidation and sulphation pathways, leading to the accumulation of a harmful intermediate metabolite produced by the cytochrome P450 system.

Which of the following is the primary toxic metabolite responsible for the subsequent liver injury?

60 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 5-year-old child is receiving intravenous morphine for analgesia. Shortly after a dose, the child develops significant nausea, a known central side effect of opioids.

This effect is caused by the direct stimulation of which one of the following structures?

61 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 6-month-old infant is reviewed on the surgical ward following a routine procedure. The infant has received appropriate intravenous opioid analgesia.

On examination, the infant is comfortable and is noted to have bilateral, symmetrically constricted pupils.

This clinical sign is caused by opioid-induced stimulation of which of the following cranial nerve nuclei?

62 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old girl with a complex neurodisability is reviewed in a specialist clinic. She is receiving long-term oral morphine for chronic pain management as part of her palliative care plan.

Her parents report that she has recently developed progressively worsening constipation, with infrequent, hard stools causing significant distress. This is a new and challenging symptom for her.

What is the primary physiological mechanism responsible for this gastrointestinal side effect?

63 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-day-old exclusively breastfed boy is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with profound lethargy and episodes of apnoea. His mother has been taking prescribed codeine for post-partum pain.

It is determined that the mother is an ultra-rapid metaboliser due to a gene duplication, resulting in high concentrations of morphine in her breast milk. This metabolic phenotype is associated with which enzyme?

64 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old boy is reviewed on the surgical ward for persistent pain following an appendicectomy. He has been prescribed regular codeine phosphate, but reports no significant analgesic effect despite receiving appropriate doses.

A pharmacogenetic cause for the lack of efficacy is considered, as codeine is a prodrug.

Which enzyme is responsible for the metabolic conversion of codeine to its active analgesic form, morphine?

65 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old boy with end-stage renal disease requiring haemodialysis is being managed on the paediatric ward. He is receiving a continuous intravenous morphine infusion for analgesia.

The nursing staff report that he has become acutely agitated and confused. On examination, he is observed to have intermittent myoclonic jerks of his limbs.

This clinical presentation is most likely caused by the accumulation of which metabolite?

66 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 12-year-old boy with end-stage renal disease is prescribed oral morphine for chronic pain. He is admitted to the ward with increasing drowsiness and a reduced respiratory rate.

His mother confirms he has been receiving his morphine as prescribed. The attending paediatric registrar suspects these symptoms are due to the accumulation of a pharmacologically active metabolite.

Which of the following metabolites is a potent analgesic known to accumulate in renal impairment?

67 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 5-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric A&E department with a reduced level of consciousness. On examination, he is unrousable, with a low respiratory rate and pinpoint pupils.

Following the administration of intravenous naloxone, he rapidly regains consciousness and his respiratory effort normalises.

Which of the following best describes the molecular mechanism of action of the administered medication?

68 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 14-year-old boy is reviewed on the ward following an appendicectomy. He is receiving intravenous morphine for post-operative pain management.

The analgesic effect of morphine is mediated, in part, by its action on post-synaptic neurons within the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.

Which of the following best describes the ionic mechanism responsible for the post-synaptic inhibition produced by morphine?

69 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with metastatic osteosarcoma is receiving a continuous intravenous morphine infusion for severe background pain. The analgesic effect is mediated by the binding of morphine to mu-opioid receptors on pre-synaptic terminals within the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, which in turn inhibits the release of excitatory neurotransmitters.

What is the primary ionic mechanism responsible for this effect?

70 / 70

Category: Palliative Care and Pain Management

A 10-year-old girl with a known diagnosis of sickle cell disease is admitted to the paediatric ward with a severe vaso-occlusive crisis. She is in significant pain and is commenced on a patient-controlled analgesia system with intravenous morphine.

Her pain settles rapidly following the initiation of treatment.

The analgesic effect of this medication is mediated through its agonist activity on which class of cellular receptor?

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