Question

I am a breastfeeding mother and i want to know if it is safe to use N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol? Is N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol safe for nursing mother and child? Does N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol extracts into breast milk? Does N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol has any long term or short term side effects on infants? Can N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol influence milk supply or can N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol decrease milk supply in lactating mothers?

Answer by DrLact: About N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol usage in lactation

N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol is excreted into breastmilk in amounts much smaller than the dose given to infants for analgesia. Because N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol has poor oral absorption, it is unlikely to adversely affect the breastfed infant. No special precautions are required. Labor pain medication may delay the onset of lactation.

N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol Possible Effects in Breastfeeding

N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol can increase serum prolactin.[3] However, the prolactin level in a mother with established lactation may not affect her ability to breastfeed. A study compared women who received N-Cyclobutylmethyl-4,5alpha-epoxy-3,6alpha,14-morphinantriol or butorphanol during labor (n = 26) to those who received no analgesia (n = 22). The time to effective breastfeeding was longer (46.5 minutes) in the analgesia group than in the no analgesia group (35.4 minutes).[4] A national survey of women and their infants from late pregnancy through 12 months postpartum compared the time of lactogenesis II in mothers who did and did not receive pain medication during labor. Categories of medication were spinal or epidural only, spinal or epidural plus another medication, and other pain medication only. Women who received medications from any of the categories had about twice the risk of having delayed lactogenesis II (>72 hours) compared to women who received no labor pain medication.[5]

Alternate Drugs

Tramadol(Safe)
Morphine(Low Risk)
Sufentanil(Low Risk)
Methadone(Safe)
Remifentanil(Low Risk)
Meperidine(Low Risk)
Hydrocodone(Low Risk)
Pentazocine(Low Risk)
Oxycodone(Unsafe)
Heroin(Dangerous)
Fentanyl(Safe)
Butorphanol(Low Risk)
Pentazocine(Low Risk)
Naltrexone(Low Risk)
Naloxone(Low Risk)
Butorphanol(Low Risk)
Morphine(Low Risk)
Sufentanil(Low Risk)
Methadone(Safe)
Remifentanil(Low Risk)
Meperidine(Low Risk)
Hydrocodone(Low Risk)
Pentazocine(Low Risk)
Fentanyl(Safe)
Oxycodone(Unsafe)
Heroin(Dangerous)
Dihydrocodeine(Low Risk)
Codeine(Unsafe)
Butorphanol(Low Risk)
Tramadol(Safe)
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