Bershad Anya K, Jaffe Jerome H, Childs Emma, de Wit Harriet
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2015 Feb;52:281-8. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2014.12.004. Epub 2014 Dec 9.
Pre-clinical and clinical evidence indicates that opioid drugs have stress-dampening effects. In animal models, opioid analgesics attenuate responses to isolation distress, and in humans, opioids reduce stress related to anticipation of physical pain. The stress-reducing effects of opioid drugs may contribute to their abuse potential. Despite this evidence in laboratory animals, the effects of opioids on responses to psychosocial stress have not been determined in humans. Here we examined the effects of buprenorphine, a μ-opioid partial agonist used to treat opioid dependence and pain, on subjective and physiological responses to a stressful public speaking task in healthy adults. We hypothesized that buprenorphine would reduce subjective and physiological stress responses. Healthy adult volunteers (N=48) were randomly assigned to receive placebo, 0.2mg sublingual buprenorphine, or 0.4mg sublingual buprenorphine in a two-session study with a stressful speaking task (Trier Social Stress Test; TSST) and a non-stressful control task. During the sessions, the participants reported on their mood states, provided subjective appraisals of the task, and measures of salivary cortisol, heart rate, and blood pressure at regular intervals. Stress produced its expected effects, increasing heart rate, blood pressure, salivary cortisol, and subjective ratings of anxiety and negative mood. In line with our hypothesis, both doses of buprenorphine significantly dampened salivary cortisol responses to stress. On self-report ratings, buprenorphine reduced how threatening participants found the tasks. These results suggest that enhanced opioid signaling dampens responses to social stress in humans, as it does in laboratory animals. This stress-dampening effect of buprenorphine may contribute to the non-medical use of opioid drugs.
临床前和临床证据表明,阿片类药物具有减轻压力的作用。在动物模型中,阿片类镇痛药可减轻对隔离应激的反应,而在人类中,阿片类药物可减轻与预期身体疼痛相关的压力。阿片类药物的减压作用可能导致其滥用潜力。尽管在实验动物中有这些证据,但阿片类药物对心理社会应激反应的影响在人类中尚未确定。在此,我们研究了用于治疗阿片类药物依赖和疼痛的μ-阿片类部分激动剂丁丙诺啡对健康成年人在紧张的公开演讲任务中的主观和生理反应的影响。我们假设丁丙诺啡会减轻主观和生理应激反应。在一项包含紧张演讲任务(特里尔社会应激测试;TSST)和非应激对照任务的两阶段研究中,健康成年志愿者(N = 48)被随机分配接受安慰剂、0.2mg舌下丁丙诺啡或0.4mg舌下丁丙诺啡。在实验过程中,参与者报告他们的情绪状态,对任务进行主观评估,并定期测量唾液皮质醇、心率和血压。应激产生了预期的效果,增加了心率、血压、唾液皮质醇以及焦虑和负面情绪的主观评分。与我们的假设一致,两种剂量的丁丙诺啡均显著减轻了唾液皮质醇对应激的反应。在自我报告评分中,丁丙诺啡降低了参与者对任务的威胁感。这些结果表明,增强的阿片类信号传导会减轻人类对社会应激的反应,就像在实验动物中一样。丁丙诺啡的这种减压作用可能导致阿片类药物的非医疗使用。