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- Norman S Miller, Tom Swiney, and Robert L Barkin.
- Department of Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. norman.miller@ht.msu.edu
- Am J Ther. 2006 Sep 1;13(5):436-44.
AbstractThe purpose of this work is to document whether prescription opioid medications used for pain enhanced or worsened pain syndromes from medical conditions in patients who received a diagnosis of prescription opioid dependence as determined by a diagnosis by Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)-IV criteria. Further, whether detoxification improved or worsened pain perceptions and self-reports in patients who chronically administered prescription opioid medications. Our study consisted of a retrospective sample of patients taken from the Addiction Treatment Unit at St Lawrence Hospital in Lansing, MI. Patients were selected from those who voluntarily sought detoxification from opioid medications in an inpatient setting. Selection criteria for the study consisted of a DSM-IV diagnosis of opioid prescription medication dependence, willingness to undergo medical detoxification, cooperation with self-report scales, and abstinence from opioid medications. Study patients were randomly selected from discharges in patient census for the years 2001 to 2003. The significant findings were that self-reported pain scores improved during the detoxification from admission to discharge, from a mean of 5.5 at admission to mean of 3.4 at discharge (0 is no pain and 10 is the most pain). The detoxification period extended to an average of 5 days. Whereas oxycodone CR (OxyContin) produced higher levels of self-reported pain at admission than at discharge, and these patients experienced significant levels of pain reduction with decremental opioid doses as with other opioid medications. Patients with a DSM-IV diagnosis of prescription opioid dependence reported (self) less pain with detoxification and abstinence from the opioid medications.
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