Division of Endocrinology, Charles Drew University of Medicine & Sciences, 1731 East 120th Street, Los Angeles, California 90059, USA.
Endocr Rev. 2010 Feb;31(1):98-132. doi: 10.1210/er.2009-0009. Epub 2009 Nov 10.
Opioid abuse has increased in the last decade, primarily as a result of increased access to prescription opioids. Physicians are also increasingly administering opioid analgesics for noncancer chronic pain. Thus, knowledge of the long-term consequences of opioid use/abuse has important implications for fully evaluating the clinical usefulness of opioid medications. Many studies have examined the effect of opioids on the endocrine system; however, a systematic review of the endocrine actions of opioids in both humans and animals has, to our knowledge, not been published since 1984. Thus, we reviewed the literature on the effect of opioids on the endocrine system. We included both acute and chronic effects of opioids, with the majority of the studies done on the acute effects although chronic effects are more physiologically relevant. In humans and laboratory animals, opioids generally increase GH and prolactin and decrease LH, testosterone, estradiol, and oxytocin. In humans, opioids increase TSH, whereas in rodents, TSH is decreased. In both rodents and humans, the reports of effects of opioids on arginine vasopressin and ACTH are conflicting. Opioids act preferentially at different receptor sites leading to stimulatory or inhibitory effects on hormone release. Increasing opioid abuse primarily leads to hypogonadism but may also affect the secretion of other pituitary hormones. The potential consequences of hypogonadism include decreased libido and erectile dysfunction in men, oligomenorrhea or amenorrhea in women, and bone loss or infertility in both sexes. Opioids may increase or decrease food intake, depending on the type of opioid and the duration of action. Additionally, opioids may act through the sympathetic nervous system to cause hyperglycemia and impaired insulin secretion. In this review, recent information regarding endocrine disorders among opioid abusers is presented.
在过去的十年中,阿片类药物滥用有所增加,主要是由于处方类阿片类药物的获取增加。医生也越来越多地为非癌症慢性疼痛患者开具阿片类镇痛药。因此,了解阿片类药物使用/滥用的长期后果对于全面评估阿片类药物的临床用途具有重要意义。许多研究都研究了阿片类药物对内分泌系统的影响;然而,据我们所知,自 1984 年以来,还没有关于阿片类药物在人类和动物中的内分泌作用的系统评价。因此,我们复习了关于阿片类药物对内分泌系统影响的文献。我们包括了阿片类药物的急性和慢性作用,大多数研究都是关于急性作用的,尽管慢性作用更具有生理学意义。在人类和实验动物中,阿片类药物通常会增加生长激素和催乳素,减少黄体生成素、睾酮、雌二醇和催产素。在人类中,阿片类药物会增加促甲状腺激素,而在啮齿动物中,促甲状腺激素会减少。在啮齿动物和人类中,关于阿片类药物对精氨酸加压素和促肾上腺皮质激素的作用的报告相互矛盾。阿片类药物主要优先作用于不同的受体部位,从而对激素释放产生刺激或抑制作用。阿片类药物滥用的增加主要导致性腺功能减退症,但也可能影响其他垂体激素的分泌。性腺功能减退症的潜在后果包括男性性欲降低和勃起功能障碍、女性月经稀少或闭经,以及两性的骨丢失或不孕。阿片类药物可能会增加或减少食物摄入,具体取决于阿片类药物的类型和作用持续时间。此外,阿片类药物可能通过交感神经系统引起高血糖和胰岛素分泌受损。在这篇综述中,介绍了阿片类药物滥用者中内分泌紊乱的最新信息。