Rush C R
Department of Behavioral Science, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40506-0086, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2001 Jan;25(1):9-17.
Endogenous opioid systems are thought to mediate at least some of the behavioral effects of ethanol. Opioid antagonists, like naloxone and naltrexone, decrease ethanol self-administration under a variety of conditions in different species of laboratory animals (e.g., rodents and nonhuman primates). Opioid agonists, like morphine, also alter ethanol consumption. However, the dose-response functions for opioid agonists are complex in that low doses increase ethanol self-administration, whereas moderate to high doses decrease ethanol self-administration. The results of prospective human laboratory studies that assessed the behavioral effects of ethanol after pretreatment with an opioid antagonist are mixed. The aim of the present study was to assess the acute subject-rated effects of ethanol (0, 0.5, and 1 g/kg) after pretreatment with hydromorphone, a mu-opioid agonist.
In the present experiment, the acute subject-rated, performance-impairing, and physiological effects of ethanol (0, 0.5, and 1 g/kg) were examined after pretreatment with hydromorphone (0, 1, and 2 mg), a mu-opioid agonist, in nine healthy volunteers. Volunteers received one of the nine possible ethanolhydromorphone combinations during each of nine experimental sessions.
Ethanol produced prototypical subject-rated drug effects (e.g., dose dependently increased ratings of "high"), impaired performance, and increased heart rate. Hydromorphone pretreatment generally did not significantly alter the subject-rated, performance-impairing, or physiological effects of ethanol.
The results of the present experiment suggest that hydromorphone pretreatment does not significantly affect the subject-rated effects of ethanol. Future human laboratory studies should test higher doses of hydromorphone. Future studies also might use more sophisticated behavioral procedures like self-administration, or perhaps drug discrimination, to determine if opioid agonists can modulate the behavioral effects of ethanol in humans.
内源性阿片系统被认为至少介导了乙醇的部分行为效应。阿片拮抗剂,如纳洛酮和纳曲酮,在不同种类的实验动物(如啮齿动物和非人灵长类动物)的多种条件下,会减少乙醇的自我给药。阿片激动剂,如吗啡,也会改变乙醇的摄入量。然而,阿片激动剂的剂量反应函数很复杂,因为低剂量会增加乙醇的自我给药,而中高剂量则会减少乙醇的自我给药。评估阿片拮抗剂预处理后乙醇行为效应的前瞻性人体实验室研究结果不一。本研究的目的是评估μ-阿片激动剂氢吗啡酮预处理后乙醇(0、0.5和1 g/kg)的急性主观效应。
在本实验中,对9名健康志愿者进行了μ-阿片激动剂氢吗啡酮(0、1和2 mg)预处理后,检测乙醇(0、0.5和1 g/kg)的急性主观、性能损害和生理效应。在九个实验环节中的每一个环节,志愿者接受九种可能的乙醇-氢吗啡酮组合之一。
乙醇产生了典型的主观药物效应(如剂量依赖性地增加“兴奋”评分)、损害性能并增加心率。氢吗啡酮预处理通常不会显著改变乙醇的主观、性能损害或生理效应。
本实验结果表明,氢吗啡酮预处理不会显著影响乙醇的主观效应。未来的人体实验室研究应测试更高剂量的氢吗啡酮。未来的研究也可能使用更复杂的行为程序,如自我给药,或者药物辨别,以确定阿片激动剂是否能调节乙醇对人类的行为效应。