4.6 Article

Effects of sub-lethal doses of fentanyl on vital physiologic functions and withdrawal-like behaviors in adult goats

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FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
卷 14, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1277601

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OIRD; control of breathing; fentanyl; ventilation; EMG

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This study investigates the physiological and behavioral changes induced by sub-lethal doses of fentanyl in large mammals. The results show that fentanyl can decrease breathing frequency and increase tidal volume, total ventilation, and blood pressure. It also leads to hypocapnia, hypoxemia, and impaired gas exchange in the lung. Furthermore, fentanyl increases withdrawal-like behaviors, including locomotor activity, biting, itching, and pawing.
Synthetic opioids like fentanyl have improved the standard of care for many patients in the clinical setting, but their abuse leads to tens of thousands of overdose deaths annually. The current opioid epidemic underscores a critical need for insights into the physiological effects of fentanyl on vital functions. High doses of opioids in small mammals cause opioid-induced respiratory depression (OIRD) leading to hypoventilation, hypoxemia, and hypercapnia. In addition, opioids can also increase the alveolar to arterial oxygen (A-a) gradient and airway dysfunction. However, little is known about the physiologic effects of sub-lethal doses of opioids in large mammals. Here we report the effects of a sub-lethal dose range of fentanyl (25-125 mu g/kg; IV) on vital physiologic functions over 90 min (min) and withdrawal-like behaviors over the subsequent 4 h (h) in adult female goats (n = 13). Fentanyl induced decreases in breathing frequency in the first few min post-injection, but then led to a sustained increase in tidal volume, total ventilation, and blood pressure with a reduced heart rate for >= 90 min. These ventilatory changes resulted in time-dependent arterial hypocapnia and hypoxemia and an increased alveolar to arterial oxygen gradient similar to 30 min post-injection indicative of impaired gas exchange in the lung. The predominant effects of fentanyl on breathing were stimulatory, underscored by an increased rate of rise of the diaphragm muscle activity and increased activation of upper airway, intercostal and abdominal muscles. Beginning 90 min post-injection we also quantified withdrawal-like behaviors over 4 h, demonstrating dose- and time-dependent increases in locomotor, biting, itching, and pawing behaviors. We conclude that fentanyl at sublethal doses induces multiple physiologic and behavior changes that emerge along different time courses suggesting multiple independent mechanisms underlying effects of opioids.

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