A preliminary study of beta endorphin during chronic naltrexone maintenance treatment in ex-opiate addicts
- PMID: 2941636
- DOI: 10.1016/0024-3205(86)90437-6
A preliminary study of beta endorphin during chronic naltrexone maintenance treatment in ex-opiate addicts
Abstract
Because opioid antagonists acutely produce rises in serum beta endorphin, we studied beta endorphin levels in 21 former opiate addicts chronically taking naltrexone. The mean AM (19.5 pg/ml) beta endorphin level was higher than the AM mean for 39 normals under 40 years old (12.1 pg/ml) (t = 3.2, p less than 0.001); the mean PM level for the naltrexone treated patients was 13.6 pg/ml. Four patients had beta endorphin levels more than 2 S.D. above the mean for the normals (greater than 26.4 pg/ml), and six others had relatively elevated PM levels. Thus, 47% (10/21) had abnormal patterns of beta endorphin levels. We had previously reported abnormally high cortisol levels in these patients, and AM cortisol correlated with AM beta endorphin levels (r = 0.7, p less than 0.001). We concluded that sustained beta endorphin elevations may occur during chronic naltrexone treatment.
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