Fentanyl-Induced Brain Hypoxia Triggers Brain Hyperglycemia and Biphasic Changes in Brain Temperature

被引:0
|
作者
Ernesto Solis
Keaton T Cameron-Burr
Yavin Shaham
Eugene A Kiyatkin
机构
[1] Behavioral Neuroscience Branch,
[2] National Institute on Drug Abuse–Intramural Research Program,undefined
[3] National Institutes of Health,undefined
[4] DHHS,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018年 / 43卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fentanyl is a potent synthetic opioid used extensively in humans for general anesthesia and analgesia. Fentanyl has emerged as a recreational drug, often in combination with heroin, and can result in lethality during overdose. Fentanyl is well characterized as an anesthetic, but the basic physiological effects of fentanyl in the brain when taken as a drug of abuse are largely unknown. We used high-speed amperometry in freely moving rats to examine the effects of intravenous fentanyl at doses within the range of possible human intake (3–40 μg/kg) on oxygen and glucose levels in nucleus accumbens (NAc). Fentanyl induced a rapid, dose-dependent decrease in NAc oxygen followed by a more delayed and prolonged increase in NAc glucose. Fentanyl induced similar oxygen decreases in the basolateral amygdala, indicating that brain hypoxia could be a generalized phenomenon. We used oxygen recordings in the subcutaneous space to confirm that fentanyl-induced brain hypoxia results from decreases in blood oxygen levels caused by drug-induced respiratory depression. Temperature recordings in the NAc, muscle, and skin showed that fentanyl induces biphasic changes in brain temperature, with an initial decrease that results primarily from peripheral vasodilation, and a subsequent increase driven by metabolic brain activation. The initial vasodilation appears caused by respiratory depression-induced hypoxia and a subsequent rise in CO2 that drives fentanyl-induced increases in NAc glucose. Together, these data suggest that fentanyl-induced respiratory depression triggers brain hypoxia and subsequent hyperglycemia, both of which precede slower changes in brain temperature and metabolic brain activity.
引用
收藏
页码:810 / 819
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of diazepam on fentanyl-induced epileptoid EEG activity and increase of multineuronal firing in limbic and mesencephalic brain structures
    Cervantes, M
    AntonioOcampo, A
    Ruelas, R
    ContrerasGomez, A
    ChavezCarrillo, I
    ARCHIVES OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, 1996, 27 (04) : 495 - 502
  • [22] Brain temperature changes during selective brain cooling
    H Trübel
    P Herman
    CH Kampmann
    R Huth
    PK Maciejewski
    F Hyder
    EJ Novotny
    Critical Care, 7 (Suppl 2):
  • [23] Effects of alcohol on brain oxygenation and brain hypoxia induced by intravenous heroin
    Thomas, Shruthi A.
    Curay, Carlos M.
    Kiyatkin, Eugene A.
    NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 2021, 197
  • [24] Hypoxia/ischemia triggers a light scattering event in rat brain
    Chance, B
    Mayevsky, A
    Guan, B
    Zhang, YT
    OXYGEN TRANSPORT TO TISSUE XIX, 1997, 428 : 457 - 467
  • [25] ON HYPOXIA-INDUCED BRAIN ANGIOGENESIS
    HARIK, SI
    HRITZ, MA
    NEUROLOGY, 1994, 44 (04) : A341 - A341
  • [26] Changes in brain oxygen and glucose induced by oxycodone: Relationships with brain temperature and peripheral vascular tone
    Solis, Ernesto, Jr.
    Afzal, Anum
    Kiyatkin, Eugene A.
    NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 133 : 481 - 490
  • [27] Robotically-induced hallucination triggers subtle changes in brain network transitions
    Dhanis, Herberto
    Blondiaux, Eva
    Bolton, Thomas
    Faivre, Nathan
    Rognini, Giulio
    Van De Ville, Dimitri
    Blankea, Olaf
    NEUROIMAGE, 2022, 248
  • [28] Melatonin modulates hypoxia-induced changes of rat brain excitability
    Maresova, Dana
    Riljak, Vladimir
    Mares, Jan
    GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOPHYSICS, 2010, 29 (01) : 67 - 71
  • [29] CHANGES IN BRAIN 5-HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE METABOLISM INDUCED BY HYPOBARIC HYPOXIA
    PRIOUXGUYONNEAU, M
    MOCAERCRETET, E
    REDJIMIHAFSI, F
    JACQUOT, C
    GENERAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1982, 13 (03): : 251 - 254
  • [30] BRAIN HYPOXIA
    LIPPOLD, OCJ
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 1972, 120 (558) : 540 - &