Literature DB >> 21948099

Can the chronic administration of the combination of buprenorphine and naloxone block dopaminergic activity causing anti-reward and relapse potential?

Kenneth Blum1, Thomas J H Chen, John Bailey, Abdalla Bowirrat, John Femino, Amanda L C Chen, Thomas Simpatico, Siobhan Morse, John Giordano, Uma Damle, Mallory Kerner, Eric R Braverman, Frank Fornari, B William Downs, Cynthia Rector, Debmayla Barh, Marlene Oscar-Berman.   

Abstract

Opiate addiction is associated with many adverse health and social harms, fatal overdose, infectious disease transmission, elevated health care costs, public disorder, and crime. Although community-based addiction treatment programs continue to reduce the harms of opiate addiction with narcotic substitution therapy such as methadone maintenance, there remains a need to find a substance that not only blocks opiate-type receptors (mu, delta, etc.) but also provides agonistic activity; hence, the impetus arose for the development of a combination of narcotic antagonism and mu receptor agonist therapy. After three decades of extensive research, the federal Drug Abuse Treatment Act 2000 (DATA) opened a window of opportunity for patients with addiction disorders by providing increased access to options for treatment. DATA allows physicians who complete a brief specialty-training course to become certified to prescribe buprenorphine and buprenorphine/naloxone (Subutex, Suboxone) for treatment of patients with opioid dependence. Clinical studies indicate that buprenorphine maintenance is as effective as methadone maintenance in retaining patients in substance abuse treatment and in reducing illicit opioid use. With that stated, we must consider the long-term benefits or potential toxicity attributed to Subutex or Suboxone. We describe a mechanism whereby chronic blockade of opiate receptors, in spite of only partial opiate agonist action, may ultimately block dopaminergic activity causing anti-reward and relapse potential. While the direct comparison is not as yet available, toxicity to buprenorphine can be found in the scientific literature. In considering our cautionary note in this commentary, we are cognizant that, to date, this is what we have available, and until such a time when the real magic bullet is discovered, we will have to endure. However, more than anything else this commentary should at least encourage the development of thoughtful new strategies to target the specific brain regions responsible for relapse prevention.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21948099      PMCID: PMC3682495          DOI: 10.1007/s12035-011-8206-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Neurobiol        ISSN: 0893-7648            Impact factor:   5.590


  102 in total

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  12 in total

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Authors:  Kenneth Blum; Marcelo Febo; Lyle Fried; Mona Li; Kristina Dushaj; Eric R Braverman; Thomas McLaughlin; Bruce Steinberg; Rajendra D Badgaiyan
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3.  Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (NAD+) and Enkephalinase Inhibition (IV1114589NAD) Infusions Significantly Attenuate Psychiatric Burden Sequalae in Substance Use Disorder (SUD) in Fifty Cases.

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5.  Withdrawal from Buprenorphine/Naloxone and Maintenance with a Natural Dopaminergic Agonist: A Cautionary Note.

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6.  Low-dose polypharmacology targeting dopamine D1 and D3 receptors reduces cue-induced relapse to heroin seeking in rats.

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8.  Hypothesizing that a Pro-Dopaminergic Regulator (KB220z Liquid Variant) can Induce "Dopamine Homeostasis" and Provide Adjunctive Detoxification Benefits in Opiate/Opioid Dependence.

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9.  A Comparison of Opioid and Nonopioid Substance Users in Residential Treatment for Co-Occurring Substance Use and Mental Disorders.

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10.  Critical Analysis of White House Anti-Drug Plan.

Authors:  Kenneth Blum; Lyle Fried; Margaret A Madigan; John Giordano; Edward J Modestino; Bruce Steinberg; David Baron; Michael DeLeon; Thomas McLaughlin; Mary Hauser; Rajendra D Badgaiyan
Journal:  Glob J Addict Rehabil Med       Date:  2017-04-27
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