Centers for Pain Management, Tifton, GA 31794, USA.
Pain Physician. 2011 Mar-Apr;14(2):145-61.
Opioid-induced hyperalgesia (OIH) is defined as a state of nociceptive sensitization caused by exposure to opioids. The condition is characterized by a paradoxical response whereby a patient receiving opioids for the treatment of pain could actually become more sensitive to certain painful stimuli. The type of pain experienced might be the same as the underlying pain or might be different from the original underlying pain. OIH appears to be a distinct, definable, and characteristic phenomenon that could explain loss of opioid efficacy in some patients. Findings of the clinical prevalence of OIH are not available. However, several observational, cross-sectional, and prospective controlled trials have examined the expression and potential clinical significance of OIH in humans. Most studies have been conducted using several distinct cohorts and methodologies utilizing former opioid addicts on methadone maintenance therapy, perioperative exposure to opioids in patients undergoing surgery, and healthy human volunteers after acute opioid exposure using human experimental pain testing. The precise molecular mechanism of OIH, while not yet understood, varies substantially in the basic science literature, as well as clinical medicine. It is generally thought to result from neuroplastic changes in the peripheral and central nervous system (CNS) that lead to sensitization of pronociceptive pathways. While there are many proposed mechanisms for OIH, 5 mechanisms involving the central glutaminergic system, spinal dynorphins, descending facilitation, genetic mechanisms, and decreased reuptake and enhanced nociceptive response have been described as the important mechanisms. Of these, the central glutaminergic system is considered the most common possibility. Another is the hypothesis that N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in OIH include activation, inhibition of the glutamate transporter system, facilitation of calcium regulated intracellular protein kinase C, and cross talk of neural mechanisms of pain and tolerance. Clinicians should suspect OIH when opioid treatment's effect seems to wane in the absence of disease progression, particularly if found in the context of unexplained pain reports or diffuse allodynia unassociated with the original pain, and increased levels of pain with increasing dosages. The treatment involves reducing the opioid dosage, tapering them off, or supplementation with NMDA receptor modulators. This comprehensive review addresses terminology and definition, prevalence, the evidence for mechanism and physiology with analysis of various factors leading to OIH, and effective strategies for preventing, reversing, or managing OIH.
阿片类药物诱发的痛觉过敏(OIH)是指由于暴露于阿片类药物而导致的痛觉敏化状态。这种情况的特点是一种矛盾反应,即接受阿片类药物治疗疼痛的患者实际上可能对某些疼痛刺激变得更加敏感。所经历的疼痛类型可能与潜在疼痛相同,也可能与原始潜在疼痛不同。OIH 似乎是一种独特、可定义和特征性的现象,可以解释一些患者阿片类药物疗效丧失的原因。目前尚无关于 OIH 临床流行率的发现。然而,几项观察性、横断面和前瞻性对照试验已经在人类中研究了 OIH 的表达和潜在临床意义。大多数研究使用了几种不同的队列和方法,包括使用美沙酮维持治疗的前阿片类药物成瘾者、接受手术的患者围手术期暴露于阿片类药物以及接受急性阿片类药物暴露后的健康人类志愿者进行人类实验性疼痛测试。虽然尚未了解 OIH 的精确分子机制,但在基础科学文献和临床医学中存在很大差异。它通常被认为是由于外周和中枢神经系统(CNS)的神经可塑性变化导致伤害性途径敏化所致。虽然有许多关于 OIH 的机制被提出,但涉及中枢谷氨酰胺能系统、脊髓强啡肽、下行促进、遗传机制以及再摄取减少和伤害性反应增强的 5 种机制被描述为重要机制。其中,中枢谷氨酰胺能系统被认为是最常见的可能性。另一种假说认为,OIH 中的 N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体包括激活、抑制谷氨酸转运体系统、促进钙调节细胞内蛋白激酶 C 以及疼痛和耐受的神经机制的串扰。当阿片类药物治疗的效果似乎在没有疾病进展的情况下减弱时,临床医生应怀疑 OIH 的存在,特别是如果在未解释的疼痛报告或与原始疼痛无关的弥漫性痛觉过敏的情况下发现,并且随着剂量的增加疼痛水平增加。治疗方法包括减少阿片类药物剂量、逐渐减少剂量或补充 NMDA 受体调节剂。这篇全面的综述涉及术语和定义、流行率、对机制和生理学的证据以及导致 OIH 的各种因素的分析,以及预防、逆转或管理 OIH 的有效策略。