Methadone maintenance patients are cross-tolerant to the antinociceptive effects of very high plasma morphine concentrations

2006 
Abstract Opioid dependent patients require higher than normal doses of opioid analgesics. However, this regimen has not been formally tested. This study utilised a double-blind placebo-controlled design to examine antinociceptive responses to saline and pseudo-steady-state plasma morphine concentrations (173 ± 11 (mean ± SEM), range 106–305 ng/ml) in 18 methadone participants in three stable, once daily methadone dose ranges 11–45 mg ( n  = 6), 46–80 mg ( n  = 6), 81–115 mg ( n  = 6) and 10 controls. Testing commenced approximately 20 h after the maintenance dose with the next dose given 1 h after morphine cessation. Nociceptive stimuli (cold pressor (seconds) and electrical stimulation (volts)) were used to measure pain detection threshold and pain tolerance. Blood samples were analysed by HPLC for plasma morphine and R -(−)-methadone concentrations. Methadone participants were hyperalgesic to cold pressor pain. High plasma morphine concentrations failed to significantly change cold pressor and electrical stimulation pain tolerance for methadone patients, but in controls, morphine significantly ( P P P
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