نتایج جستجو برای: opioid tolerance

تعداد نتایج: 157499  

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2009
Carrie L Wade Lori L Eskridge H Oanh X Nguyen Kelley F Kitto Laura S Stone George Wilcox Carolyn A Fairbanks

Systemically or centrally administered agmatine (decarboxylated arginine) prevents, moderates, or reverses opioid-induced tolerance and self-administration, inflammatory and neuropathic pain, and sequelae associated with ischemia and spinal cord injury in rodents. These behavioral models invoke the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor/nitric-oxide synthase cascade. Agmatine (AG) antagonizes the...

Journal: :Journal of psychoactive drugs 2012
Mel Pohl Logan Smith

Chronic pain is commonly treated by prescribing an opioid medication. For those suffering from both chronic pain and substance dependence, barriers to adequate pain management increase. This often causes both disorders to exacerbate one another. Effective treatment may also be hampered by opioid-induced hyperalgesia, tolerance, physical dependence, "chemical coping," and diminished physical and...

Journal: :Frontiers in Genetics 2012

Journal: :Romanian journal of anaesthesia and intensive care 2016
Adriana Miclescu

Opioid analgesia continues to be the primary pharmacologic intervention for managing acute pain and malignant pain in both hospitalized and ambulatory patients. The increasing use of opioids in chronic nonmalignant pain is more problematic. Opioid treatment is complicated with the risks raised by adverse effects, especially cognitive disturbance, respiratory depression but also the risk of tole...

2006
Lei Tang Pradeep K. Shukla Lili X. Wang Zaijie Jim Wang

Previous studies have suggested that Ca /calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) can modulate opioid tolerance and dependence via its action on learning and memory. In this study, we examined whether CaMKII could directly regulate opioid tolerance and dependence. CaMKII activity was increased after the treatment with morphine (100 mg/kg s.c. or 75 mg s.c. of morphine/pellet/mouse); the ...

2016
Yoshinori Hayashi Saori Morinaga Jing Zhang Yasushi Satoh Andrea L. Meredith Takahiro Nakata Zhou Wu Shinichi Kohsaka Kazuhide Inoue Hiroshi Nakanishi

Although morphine is a gold standard medication, long-term opioid use is associated with serious side effects, such as morphine-induced hyperalgesia (MIH) and anti-nociceptive tolerance. Microglia-to-neuron signalling is critically involved in pain hypersensitivity. However, molecules that control microglial cellular state under chronic morphine treatment remain unknown. Here we show that the m...

Journal: :Molecular Pain 2005
Bihua Bie Zhizhong Z Pan

Currently, opioid-based drugs are the most effective pain relievers that are widely used in the treatment of pain. However, the analgesic efficacy of opioids is significantly limited by the development of tolerance after repeated opioid administration. Glutamate receptors have been reported to critically participate in the development and maintenance of opioid tolerance, but the underlying mech...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 1987
A Bandura A O'Leary C B Taylor J Gauthier D Gossard

In this experiment, we tested for opioid and nonopioid mechanisms of pain control through cognitive means and the relation of opioid involvement to perceived coping efficacy. Subjects were taught cognitive methods of pain control, were administered a placebo, or received no intervention. Their pain tolerance was then measured at periodic intervals after they were administered either a saline so...

2002
Thomas R. Kosten Tony P. George

Opioid tolerance, dependence, and addiction are all manifestations of brain changes resulting from chronic opioid abuse. The opioid abuser's struggle for recovery is in great part a struggle to overcome the effects of these changes. Medications such as methadone, LAAM, buprenorphine, and naltrexone act on the same brain structures and processes as addictive opioids, but with protective or norma...

Journal: :Pain physician 2009
Sanford M Silverman

Opioids have been and continue to be used for the treatment of chronic pain. Evidence supports the notion that opioids can be safely administered in patients with chronic pain without the development of addiction or chemical dependency. However, over the past several years, concerns have arisen with respect to administration of opioids for the treatment of chronic pain, particularly non-cancer ...

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