Opioids Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Opioids stocks.

Opioids Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 3 TEVA A Week Of Fast-Moving Stocks Ahead: Disney, Toyota, Ferrari, Constellation
May 3 TEVA Unlocking Q1 Potential of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (TEVA): Exploring Wall Street Estimates for Key Metrics
May 3 AMPH Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:AMPH) Fundamentals Look Pretty Strong: Could The Market Be Wrong About The Stock?
May 2 TEVA Teva to Present at the 2024 Bank of America Healthcare Conference
May 2 NKTR Nektar to Announce Financial Results for the First Quarter 2024 on Thursday, May 9, 2024, After Close of U.S.-Based Financial Markets
May 2 TEVA Corcept Therapeutics Incorporated (NASDAQ:CORT) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 2 AMPH Will Taysha Gene Therapies, Inc. (TSHA) Report Negative Q1 Earnings? What You Should Know
May 2 TEVA Teva’s 2023 Healthy Future Report Showcases Renewed Sustainability Strategy and Ambitious Targets
May 2 TEVA Q1 2024 Corcept Therapeutics Inc Earnings Call
May 2 TEVA Corcept Therapeutics Inc (CORT) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Strong Growth Amid ...
May 1 AMPH Amphastar Pharmaceuticals (AMPH) Reports Next Week: Wall Street Expects Earnings Growth
Apr 30 AMPH Amphastar Pharmaceuticals to Release First Quarter Earnings and Hold Conference Call on May 8, 2024
Apr 30 TEVA Novo, Teva, AstraZeneca issued FTC warnings over ‘bogus’ patents
Apr 30 AMPH Why Amphastar (AMPH) Could Beat Earnings Estimates Again
Apr 30 TEVA U.S. Commercialization Agreement with Quallent to Drive Patient Savings with First High-Concentration Citrate-Free Interchangeable Biosimilar to Humira® (adalimumab)
Apr 29 JAN Top 4 Industrials Stocks That May Collapse This Quarter
Opioids

Opioids are substances that act on opioid receptors to produce morphine-like effects. Medically they are primarily used for pain relief, including anesthesia. Other medical uses include suppression of diarrhea, replacement therapy for opioid use disorder, reversing opioid overdose, suppressing cough, suppressing opioid induced constipation, as well as for executions in the United States. Extremely potent opioids such as carfentanil are only approved for veterinary use. Opioids are also frequently used non-medically for their euphoric effects or to prevent withdrawal.

Side effects of opioids may include itchiness, sedation, nausea, respiratory depression, constipation, and euphoria. Tolerance and dependence will develop with continuous use, requiring increasing doses and leading to a withdrawal syndrome upon abrupt discontinuation. The euphoria attracts recreational use and frequent, escalating recreational use of opioids typically results in addiction. An overdose or concurrent use with other depressant drugs commonly results in death from respiratory depression.Opioids act by binding to opioid receptors, which are found principally in the central and peripheral nervous system and the gastrointestinal tract. These receptors mediate both the psychoactive and the somatic effects of opioids. Opioid drugs include partial agonists, like the anti-diarrhea drug loperamide and antagonists like naloxegol for opioid-induced constipation, which do not cross the blood-brain barrier, but can displace other opioids from binding to those receptors.
Because opioids are addictive and may result in fatal overdose, most are controlled substances. In 2013, between 28 and 38 million people used opioids illicitly (0.6% to 0.8% of the global population between the ages of 15 and 65). In 2011, an estimated 4 million people in the United States used opioids recreationally or were dependent on them. As of 2015, increased rates of recreational use and addiction are attributed to over-prescription of opioid medications and inexpensive illicit heroin. Conversely, fears about over-prescribing, exaggerated side effects and addiction from opioids are similarly blamed for under-treatment of pain.

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