Subjective and behavioral responses to
intravenous fentanyl in healthy
volunteers
by
Zacny JP, Lichtor JL, Zaragoza JG, de Wit H
Department of Psychiatry,
Pritzker School of Medicine,
University of Chicago,
IL 60637.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) 1992; 107(2-3):319-26
ABSTRACT
Fentanyl is a mu opiate agonist which is occasionally abused by medical
personnel who have ready access to the drug. We examined in healthy volunteers
(N = 13) the subjective and psychomotor-impairing effects of intravenous
fentanyl (0-100 micrograms/70 kg). A randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover
design was used in which subjects were injected with 0, 25 (N = 6), 50 and 100
micrograms/70 kg fentanyl in a double-blind fashion. Subjects completed several
questionnaires commonly used in abuse liability testing studies before drug
injection and at periodic intervals for up to 3 h after drug injection. Subjects
also completed several psychomotor tests at these times. Some aspects of
psychomotor functioning (e.g., eye-hand coordination) were impaired by fentanyl.
Fentanyl produced dose-related increases in ratings of "high" and "sedated," but
also tended to produce dysphoria and somatic symptomatology. Most subjects
reported liking the effects of the two higher doses of fentanyl for at least a
brief time after injection, but they varied widely in their linking ratings
across the 3-h post-drug injection period. Despite the transient increases in
liking ratings, fentanyl did not increase scores on a widely-used measure of
drug-induced euphoria (morphine-benzedrine group scale of the Addiction Research
Center Inventory). The present results suggest that some medical personnel who
experiment with fentanyl may like it, and thus be at increased risk for abusing
the drug in the future.
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Tolerance
Speedballs
Fentanyl for cats
4-methyl fentanyl
Fentanyl: structure
Fentanyl: synthesis
Spinal opioid therapy
Fentanyl and ketamine
Opioids and anaesthesia
Remifentanil and alfentanil
Beta-hydroxy 3-methylfentanyl
Fentanyl and the immune system
Morphine: a mood-brightening smart-drug?

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