Naloxone (Narcan)
Anesthesia Implications
Classification: Opioid antagonist
Therapeutic Effects: Opioid reversal
Time to Onset: IV: 1-2 minutes; IM: 2-5 minutes
Duration: 30-45 minutes
Primary Considerations
Epidural Opioids – small doses of naloxone can be given to reverse the adverse affects of epidural opioids without necessarily reversing the analgesia.
Sympathetic stimulation – rapid reversal of opioids can stimulate a sympathetic response (tachycardia, ventricular irritability, hypertension, and pulmonary edema). This is caused by acute pain that is no longer covered by opioids. This response is particularly severe in the opioid dependent.
Clonidine – Narcan may antagonize the antihypertensive affects of clonidine.
Rare complications – Pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary edema are the two most serious complications of narcan
IV push dose
Adult: 0.5–1 mcg/kg every 3–5 min, titrated to respiratory rate
(in a 10 ml syringe, draw up the 1 ml 0.4 mg/ml with 9 ml of saline. That makes 40 mcg/ml)
This drug will wear off well before the opioids, so follow with IM naloxone (1-2 mcg/kg) or an infusion (4-5 mcg/kg/hr)
Pediatric: Neonate less than 5 years of age or less than 20 kg of body weight: 0.1 mg/kg. This dose may be repeated as necessary.
5 years and older or body weight more than 20 kg: 2 mg by IV push, intraosseus or by ET tube. Follow each dose given via ET tube with at least 5 mL of isotonic sodium chloride injection
IV infusion dose
Adult: 4-5 mcg/kg/hr – this infusion is usually preceded by the IV bolus dose
IM dose
Adult: 1-2 mcg/kg – this dose is usually preceded by the IV bolus dose
Method of Action
Competitive opioid antagonist with a high affinity for the mu-opioid receptor
Metabolism
Hepatic
Elimination
Renal
Butterworth. Morgan & Mikhail’s Clinical Anesthesiology. 2013.
American Academy of Pediatrics. Naloxone Dosage and Route of Administration for Infants and Children: Addendum to Emergency Drug Doses for Infants and Children. 2021 web link
US Food and Drug Administration. Naloxone for Treatement of Opioide Overdose. 2016 web link