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Addressing opioid tolerance and opioid‐induced hypersensitivity: Recent developments and future therapeutic strategies

Faris Khan, Aman Mehan

2021Pharmacology Research & Perspectives42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Opioids are a commonly prescribed and efficacious medication for the treatment of chronic pain but major side effects such as addiction, respiratory depression, analgesic tolerance, and paradoxical pain hypersensitivity make them inadequate and unsafe for patients requiring long-term pain management. This review summarizes recent advances in our understanding of the outcomes of chronic opioid administration to lay the foundation for the development of novel pharmacological strategies that attenuate opioid tolerance and hypersensitivity; the two main physiological mechanisms underlying the inadequacies of current therapeutic strategies. We also explore mechanistic similarities between the development of neuropathic pain states, opioid tolerance, and hypersensitivity which may explain opioids' lack of efficacy in certain patients. The findings challenge the current direction of analgesic research in developing non-opioid alternatives and we suggest that improving opioids, rather than replacing them, will be a fruitful avenue for future research.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOpioidChronic painAddictionAnalgesicIntensive care medicineNeuropathic painDrug toleranceDepression (economics)Pain toleranceAnesthesiaPsychiatryThreshold of painInternal medicineMacroeconomicsReceptorEconomicsPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsNeuropeptides and Animal PhysiologyPharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and Effects
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