Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
899574 | Addictive Behaviors | 2011 | 4 Pages |
We compared cold-pain responses among male current opioid users with and without concurrent benzodiazepine use, long-term ex-users, and healthy controls. Forty-eight current opioid users (14 concurrently using benzodiazepines), 34 ex-users (abstinent for ≥ 1 y) and 63 controls received cold-pressor tests. Pain threshold (first reporting pain) and pain tolerance (total immersion time) were recorded. Pain thresholds were similar in ex-users and current users; pain tolerance was similar in ex-users and controls. Net pain tolerance (endurance) in ex-users was intermediate between the other two groups. Current users showed higher pain threshold and shorter pain tolerance than controls (p < 0.05). Current users not co-using benzodiazepines showed the lowest pain tolerance and net pain tolerance, and differed significantly from controls, ex-users, and current users co-using benzodiazepines (p < 0.05). Neuroticism was higher in current users than in the other two groups (p < 0.001), extraversion marginally lower (p < 0.05); net pain tolerance differences remained significant after controlling for these. Benzodiazepine use modulates pain tolerance in opioid users. Pain responses altered by opioid use may partially recover with abstinence.
► Cold pain responses were compared in current opioid users, ex-users and controls. ► Net pain tolerance is highest in control, then ex-users and lowest in current users. ► Current users who used benzodiazepine differ in pain response from those who did not. ► Personality trait profiles differ among groups with no effect on pain responses. ► Pain responses altered by opioid use may partially recover through abstinence.