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Potentiation of fentanyl-induced respiratory depression by alcohol is not fully reversed by naloxone
Emma V. Frye, Lyndsay E. Hastings, Aniah N. Matthews, Adriana Gregory-Flores, Janaina C.M. Vendruscolo, Lindsay A. Kryszak, Shelley N Jackson, Aidan J. Hampson, Nora D. Volkow, Leandro F. Vendruscolo, Renata C.N. Marchette, George F. Koob
Emma V. Frye, Lyndsay E. Hastings, Aniah N. Matthews, Adriana Gregory-Flores, Janaina C.M. Vendruscolo, Lindsay A. Kryszak, Shelley N Jackson, Aidan J. Hampson, Nora D. Volkow, Leandro F. Vendruscolo, Renata C.N. Marchette, George F. Koob
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Research In-Press Preview Neuroscience Public Health

Potentiation of fentanyl-induced respiratory depression by alcohol is not fully reversed by naloxone

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Abstract

The high frequency of opioid overdose deaths often involves co-use of alcohol, which is reported in approximately 30% of fentanyl fatalities. Both substances depress respiratory function, and their combined effects can be lethal. The present study investigated physiological parameters of respiratory-depressant effects of fentanyl when co-administered with alcohol and its sensitivity to naloxone reversal using whole-body plethysmography in male and female Long-Evans rats. Administration of a high, sedative-like dose of alcohol alone or fentanyl alone resulted in no mortality, but fentanyl+alcohol led to mortality rates of 42% and 33% in females and males, respectively. The fentanyl+alcohol combination reduced minute ventilation and increased apneic pauses compared with either drug alone. Lower, binge-like alcohol doses, when combined with fentanyl, also amplified respiratory depression. Pretreatment with naloxone did not fully restore normal respiration. Naloxone administered after fentanyl+alcohol transiently reversed the decrease in minute ventilation but did not reverse apneic pauses. Fentanyl-dependent rats were partially tolerant to fentanyl- and fentanyl+alcohol-induced respiratory depression, but alcohol-dependent rats exhibited sensitization to alcohol- and fentanyl+alcohol-induced apnea. These findings highlight physiological parameters of severe respiratory risks with fentanyl+alcohol co-use, which are inadequately reversed by naloxone, underscoring the need for targeted strategies to manage opioid+alcohol overdoses.

Authors

Emma V. Frye, Lyndsay E. Hastings, Aniah N. Matthews, Adriana Gregory-Flores, Janaina C.M. Vendruscolo, Lindsay A. Kryszak, Shelley N Jackson, Aidan J. Hampson, Nora D. Volkow, Leandro F. Vendruscolo, Renata C.N. Marchette, George F. Koob

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