
Ask a doctor about a prescription for MORPHINE B. BRAUN 1 mg/mL INJECTABLE SOLUTION
Package Leaflet: Information for the User
Morphine B. Braun 1 mg/ml Solution for Injection
morphine, hydrochloride
Read all of this leaflet carefully before you start using this medicine because it contains important information for you.
Contents of the pack
Morphine B. Braun belongs to the group of opioid analgesics and is indicated in the following cases:
Do not use Morphine B. Braun
Warnings and precautions
Consult your doctor or pharmacist or nurse before starting to use Morphine B. Braun.
Consult your doctor or pharmacist or nurse if you experience any of the following symptoms:
Your doctor will exercise special caution when administering this medicine to very young patients, elderly patients, severely debilitated patients, or patients with renal or hepatic insufficiency, who may be more sensitive to the effects of morphine.
Special caution is recommended with morphine:
Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) has been reported in association with morphine treatment. Symptoms usually occur within the first 10 days of treatment. Inform your doctor if you have ever suffered from a severe skin rash or skin peeling, blisters, and/or sores in the mouth after taking morphine or other opioids. Stop using this medicine and seek immediate medical attention if you notice any of the following symptoms: blisters, widespread skin peeling, or pus-filled spots (pustules) along with fever.
Sleep-related respiratory disorders:
This medicine may cause sleep-related respiratory disorders, such as sleep apnea (pauses in breathing during sleep) and sleep-related hypoxemia (low oxygen levels in the blood). Symptoms may include pauses in breathing during sleep, nighttime awakenings due to dyspnea, difficulty maintaining sleep, or excessive daytime sleepiness. If you or someone else observes these symptoms, contact your doctor. Your doctor may consider reducing the dose.
Tolerance, dependence, and addiction
This medicine contains morphine, which is an opioid. Repeated use of opioids can lead to decreased effectiveness of the medicine (getting used to it, also known as tolerance). Repeated use of this medicine can also cause dependence, abuse, and addiction, which can lead to potentially life-threatening overdose. The risk of these adverse effects may be greater with higher doses and longer use.
Dependence or addiction can cause a feeling of lack of control over the amount of medicine you need to use or how often you need to use it.
The risk of dependence or addiction varies from person to person. You may have a greater risk of dependence or addiction to morphine if:
If you notice any of the following symptoms while taking morphine, it could be a sign of dependence or addiction:
If you notice any of these symptoms, consult your doctor to determine the best course of treatment for you, including when it is appropriate to stop the medicine and how to do it safely (see section 3 "If you stop treatment with Morphine B. Braun").
Sudden stop of treatment, if you are physically dependent on morphine, can precipitate a withdrawal syndrome.
Withdrawal symptoms can also occur after administration of an opioid antagonist (naloxone or naltrexone) or an agonist/antagonist (pentazocine).
Use in athletes
This medicine contains morphine, which can give a positive result in doping tests.
Other medicines and Morphine B. Braun
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are using or have recently used or might use any other medicines.
There are a number of medicines that should not be used with morphine, unless strictly necessary:
There is another group of medicines that can increase the effects of morphine. In this case, your doctor will adjust the dose of both medicines:
There is a group of medicines that can decrease the effect of morphine, including:
Use of Morphine B. Braun with food, drinks, and alcohol
Concomitant administration of this medicine with alcohol produces mutual potentiation of toxicity, with increased central depression.
Pregnancy, breastfeeding, and fertility
If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, think you may be pregnant, or are planning to have a baby, ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before using this medicine.
Morphine crosses the placenta. Regular use during pregnancy can cause physical dependence in the fetus, resulting in withdrawal symptoms in the newborn (such as convulsions, irritability, excessive crying, tremors, hyperactive reflexes, fever, increased respiratory rate, hyperreflexia, vomiting, increased bowel movements, and diarrhea, sneezing, and yawning), which must be treated by a doctor.
The use of this medicine is only accepted in the absence of safer alternatives.
Morphine is excreted in breast milk. Although no problems have been described in humans, the possible effects on the infant are unknown, so your doctor must weigh the benefits and risks.
Driving and using machines
Ask your doctor if you can drive or use machines while being treated with this medicine. It is important that before driving or using machines, you observe how this medicine affects you. Do not drive or use machines if you feel drowsy, dizzy, have blurred vision, or double vision, or have difficulty concentrating. Be especially careful at the start of treatment, after a dose increase, after a change in formulation, and/or when administering it concomitantly with other medicines.
Morphine B. Braun contains sodium
This medicine contains less than 1 mmol of sodium (23 mg) per ampoule; it is essentially "sodium-free".
This medicine will be administered only by healthcare personnel.
The dose and duration of treatment will be individualized by your doctor based on the potency and duration of the drug used, the intensity of the pain, other medications administered simultaneously, and the patient's response.
The injection can be administered into a vein (intravenous injection), into a muscle (intramuscular injection), or under the skin (subcutaneous injection). It can be administered intermittently (e.g., every 4 hours) or continuously (e.g., through slow infusion).
Before starting treatment and periodically during treatment, your doctor will explain what you can expect from the use of Morphine B. Braun, when and how long you need to take it, when to contact your doctor, and when to stop it (see also the section "If you stop treatment with Morphine B. Braun").
Use in children and adolescents
This medicine should not be used via the epidural or intrathecal route in children.
If you use more Morphine B. Braun than you should
In case of overdose or accidental ingestion, contact your doctor or the Toxicology Information Service immediately. Telephone (91) 562 04 20, indicating the medicine and the amount used.
Overdose is characterized by respiratory depression with bradypnea (decreased respiratory rate), accompanied or not by central nervous system depression. People who have taken an overdose may also experience difficulty breathing that can lead to loss of consciousness or even death.
People who have taken an overdose may suffer from inhalation pneumonia; symptoms may include shortness of breath, cough, and fever.
If you forget to use Morphine B. Braun
Do not use a double dose to make up for forgotten doses.
If you stop treatment with Morphine B. Braun
Do not stop treatment with morphine unless your doctor approves it. If you want to stop treatment with this medicine, ask your doctor how to gradually reduce the dose to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal symptoms can be general pain, tremors, diarrhea, stomach pain, nausea, flu-like symptoms, palpitations, and dilated pupils. Psychological symptoms consist of a deep feeling of dissatisfaction, anxiety, and irritability.
If you have any further questions on the use of this medicine, ask your doctor or pharmacist.
Like all medicines, this medicine may cause adverse effects, although not all people suffer from them.
Stop using this medicine and seek immediate medical attention if you observe any of the following symptoms:
Other possible adverse effects:
Very frequent (may affect more than 1 in 10 patients)
Frequent (may affect up to 1 in 10 patients)
With prolonged treatments
Infrequent (may affect up to 1 in 100 people)
Frequency not known (cannot be estimated from available data):
This medicine may cause physical dependence when used for a long period. If you suddenly stop treatment with morphine, it may trigger a withdrawal syndrome characterized by the following symptoms: restlessness, anxiety, palpitations, tremors, or sweating.
Reporting of Adverse Effects
If you experience any type of adverse effect, consult your doctor, pharmacist, or nurse, even if it is a possible adverse effect that does not appear in this prospectus. You can also report them directly through the Medicines for Human Use Pharmacovigilance System www.notificaRAM.es. By reporting adverse effects, you can contribute to providing more information on the safety of this medicine.
Keep out of sight and reach of children.
This medicine does not require any special storage temperature. Store in the original packaging to protect it from light.
The contents of the ampoules should be used immediately after opening. Once the package is opened, discard the unused portion of the solution.
Do not use the medicine after the expiration date that appears on the packaging after CAD. The expiration date is the last day of the month indicated.
Medicines should not be thrown away through drains or into the trash. Deposit the packaging and medicines you no longer need at the pharmacy's SIGRE point. Ask your pharmacist how to dispose of the packaging and medicines you no longer need. This will help protect the environment.
Composition of Morfina B. Braun
The active ingredient is morphine hydrochloride (as trihydrate). Each ampoule contains 1 mg of morphine hydrochloride trihydrate (equivalent to 0.76 mg of morphine base).
The other components per ampoule are sodium chloride and water for injectable preparations.
Appearance of Morfina B. Braunand Package Contents
Transparent injectable solution presented in 1 ml topaz glass ampoules.
Packages containing 10 ampoules.
Marketing Authorization Holder:
Ctra. de Terrassa, 121
08191 Rubí (Barcelona),
Spain.
Manufacturer:
Ronda de los Olivares, Parcela 11,
Polígono Industrial Los Olivares,
23009 Jaén (Jaén),
Spain.
Date of the Last Revision of this Prospectus:October 2024.
Detailed information about this medicine is available on the website of the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products. http//www.aemps.gob.es/
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This information is intended only for doctors or healthcare professionals:
This medicine should be administered by healthcare personnel and only by subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous, intrathecal, and epidural routes.
Morphine hydrochloride trihydrate can be administered intermittently (e.g., every 4 hours) or continuously (e.g., by slow perfusion).
At all times, the necessary equipment for artificial respiration and an opioid antagonist medication should be available.
Instructions for the correct use of Morfina B. Braun
This medicine is incompatible with alkalis, bromides, iodides, potassium permanganate, tannic acid, and vegetable astringents, with iron, lead, magnesium, silver, copper, and zinc salts.
Physical-chemical incompatibility (precipitate formation) has been demonstrated between morphine sulfate solutions and 5-fluorouracil.
The best alternatives with the same active ingredient and therapeutic effect.
Discuss dosage, side effects, interactions, contraindications, and prescription renewal for MORPHINE B. BRAUN 1 mg/mL INJECTABLE SOLUTION – subject to medical assessment and local rules.