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Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Opioids are indispensable for pain treatment but may cause serious nausea and vomiting. The mechanism leading to these complications is not clear. We investigated whether an opioid effect on the vestibular system resulting in corrupt head motion sensation is causative and, conse...

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Autores principales: Lehnen, Nadine, Heuser, Fabian, Sağlam, Murat, Schulz, Christian M., Wagner, Klaus J., Taki, Masakatsu, Kochs, Eberhard F., Jahn, Klaus, Brandt, Thomas, Glasauer, Stefan, Schneider, Erich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4551845/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26313751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135263
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author Lehnen, Nadine
Heuser, Fabian
Sağlam, Murat
Schulz, Christian M.
Wagner, Klaus J.
Taki, Masakatsu
Kochs, Eberhard F.
Jahn, Klaus
Brandt, Thomas
Glasauer, Stefan
Schneider, Erich
author_facet Lehnen, Nadine
Heuser, Fabian
Sağlam, Murat
Schulz, Christian M.
Wagner, Klaus J.
Taki, Masakatsu
Kochs, Eberhard F.
Jahn, Klaus
Brandt, Thomas
Glasauer, Stefan
Schneider, Erich
author_sort Lehnen, Nadine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Opioids are indispensable for pain treatment but may cause serious nausea and vomiting. The mechanism leading to these complications is not clear. We investigated whether an opioid effect on the vestibular system resulting in corrupt head motion sensation is causative and, consequently, whether head-rest prevents nausea. METHODS: Thirty-six healthy men (26.6±4.3 years) received an opioid remifentanil infusion (45 min, 0.15 μg/kg/min). Outcome measures were the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain determined by video-head-impulse-testing, and nausea. The first experiment (n = 10) assessed outcome measures at rest and after a series of five 1-Hz forward and backward head-trunk movements during one-time remifentanil administration. The second experiment (n = 10) determined outcome measures on two days in a controlled crossover design: (1) without movement and (2) with a series of five 1-Hz forward and backward head-trunk bends 30 min after remifentanil start. Nausea was psychophysically quantified (scale from 0 to 10). The third controlled crossover experiment (n = 16) assessed nausea (1) without movement and (2) with head movement; isolated head movements consisting of the three axes of rotation (pitch, roll, yaw) were imposed 20 times at a frequency of 1 Hz in a random, unpredictable order of each of the three axes. All movements were applied manually, passively with amplitudes of about ± 45 degrees. RESULTS: The VOR gain decreased during remifentanil administration (p<0.001), averaging 0.92±0.05 (mean±standard deviation) before, 0.60±0.12 with, and 0.91±0.05 after infusion. The average half-life of VOR recovery was 5.3±2.4 min. 32/36 subjects had no nausea at rest (nausea scale 0.00/0.00 median/interquartile range). Head-trunk and isolated head movement triggered nausea in 64% (p<0.01) with no difference between head-trunk and isolated head movements (nausea scale 4.00/7.25 and 1.00/4.5, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Remifentanil reversibly decreases VOR gain at a half-life reflecting the drug’s pharmacokinetics. We suggest that the decrease in VOR gain leads to a perceptual mismatch of multisensory input with the applied head movement, which results in nausea, and that, consequently, vigorous head movements should be avoided to prevent opioid-induced nausea.
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spelling pubmed-45518452015-09-01 Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest Lehnen, Nadine Heuser, Fabian Sağlam, Murat Schulz, Christian M. Wagner, Klaus J. Taki, Masakatsu Kochs, Eberhard F. Jahn, Klaus Brandt, Thomas Glasauer, Stefan Schneider, Erich PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Opioids are indispensable for pain treatment but may cause serious nausea and vomiting. The mechanism leading to these complications is not clear. We investigated whether an opioid effect on the vestibular system resulting in corrupt head motion sensation is causative and, consequently, whether head-rest prevents nausea. METHODS: Thirty-six healthy men (26.6±4.3 years) received an opioid remifentanil infusion (45 min, 0.15 μg/kg/min). Outcome measures were the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain determined by video-head-impulse-testing, and nausea. The first experiment (n = 10) assessed outcome measures at rest and after a series of five 1-Hz forward and backward head-trunk movements during one-time remifentanil administration. The second experiment (n = 10) determined outcome measures on two days in a controlled crossover design: (1) without movement and (2) with a series of five 1-Hz forward and backward head-trunk bends 30 min after remifentanil start. Nausea was psychophysically quantified (scale from 0 to 10). The third controlled crossover experiment (n = 16) assessed nausea (1) without movement and (2) with head movement; isolated head movements consisting of the three axes of rotation (pitch, roll, yaw) were imposed 20 times at a frequency of 1 Hz in a random, unpredictable order of each of the three axes. All movements were applied manually, passively with amplitudes of about ± 45 degrees. RESULTS: The VOR gain decreased during remifentanil administration (p<0.001), averaging 0.92±0.05 (mean±standard deviation) before, 0.60±0.12 with, and 0.91±0.05 after infusion. The average half-life of VOR recovery was 5.3±2.4 min. 32/36 subjects had no nausea at rest (nausea scale 0.00/0.00 median/interquartile range). Head-trunk and isolated head movement triggered nausea in 64% (p<0.01) with no difference between head-trunk and isolated head movements (nausea scale 4.00/7.25 and 1.00/4.5, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Remifentanil reversibly decreases VOR gain at a half-life reflecting the drug’s pharmacokinetics. We suggest that the decrease in VOR gain leads to a perceptual mismatch of multisensory input with the applied head movement, which results in nausea, and that, consequently, vigorous head movements should be avoided to prevent opioid-induced nausea. Public Library of Science 2015-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4551845/ /pubmed/26313751 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135263 Text en © 2015 Lehnen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lehnen, Nadine
Heuser, Fabian
Sağlam, Murat
Schulz, Christian M.
Wagner, Klaus J.
Taki, Masakatsu
Kochs, Eberhard F.
Jahn, Klaus
Brandt, Thomas
Glasauer, Stefan
Schneider, Erich
Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title_full Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title_fullStr Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title_full_unstemmed Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title_short Opioid-Induced Nausea Involves a Vestibular Problem Preventable by Head-Rest
title_sort opioid-induced nausea involves a vestibular problem preventable by head-rest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4551845/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26313751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135263
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