Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2000
Impaired neuropsychological performance in chronic nonmalignant pain patients receiving long-term oral opioid therapy.
The study investigated neuropsychological performance in chronic nonmalignant pain patients receiving long-term oral opioid therapy. Forty patients treated solely with regular and stable doses of an oral opioid were compared with 40 healthy volunteers. The patients received daily opioid doses of 15-300 mg of oral morphine (median: 60 mg) or equianalgesic doses of other opioids. ⋯ In the retesting of 14 controls, it was found that the tests showed high reliability. Vigilance/attention, psychomotor speed, and working memory were significantly impaired in chronic nonmalignant pain patients. The present study cannot determine which factors influenced the test results, but pain itself seemed to have an arousal effect on working memory.