The term "narcotic" is believed to have been coined by the Greek physician
Galen to refer to agents that numb or deaden, causing
paralysis or loss of
feeling. It is based on the Greek word
ναρκωσις (narcosis)
, the term used by
Hippocrates for the process of numbing or the numbed state. Galen listed
mandrake root, altercus (eclata), seeds, and
poppy juice (
opium) as the chief examples. It originally referred to any substance that relieved pain, dulled the senses, or induced sleep. Now, the term is used in many ways. Some people might define narcotics as substances that bind at
opioid receptors (cellular membrane proteins activated by substances like heroin or morphine), while others refer to any
illicit substance as a narcotic. From a U.S.
legal perspective, narcotics refer to opium, opium derivatives, and their semi-synthetic substitutes, though in U.S. law, due to its numbing properties, cocaine is also considered a narcotic. The definition encompassing "any illegal drug" was first recorded in 1926. Its first use as an adjective is first attested to . There are many different types of narcotics. The two most common forms of narcotic drugs are
morphine and
codeine. Both are synthesized from opium for medicinal use. The most commonly used drug for recreational purposes created from opium is
heroin. Synthesized drugs created with an opium base for use in pain management are
fentanyl, oxycodone, tramadol, pethidine (Demerol), hydrocodone, methadone, and hydromorphone. New forms of existing pain medications are being created regularly. The newest formulation to come out was in 2014 when zohydro, an increased dosage formula of hydrocodone, was released; this is so far the strongest hydrocodone formulation created for pain management, on par with a moderate dose of oxycodone . ==Analgesics==