Affiliation:
1. Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, University of California, La Jolla, California, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To apply the sequential up–down method to a human experimental pain model in order to examine the opioid-sparing effect of oral pregabalin on intravenous alfentanil.
Design
Double-blind, randomized, crossover.
Setting
Academic university medical center.
Subjects
Thirty-one healthy males.
Methods
The median effective plasma concentration of intravenous alfentanil was determined under two conditions: alfentanil alone (phase I) and alfentanil+ pregabalin (300 mg orally) (phase II). The alfentanil plasma level (after a computer-controlled infusion) producing a success criterion (at least 30% intradermal capsaicin-induced pain reduction compared with placebo) was used to determine higher or lower doses for each sequential subject. The median dose producing a success criterion and its confidence interval were determined.
Results
On the basis of the t test for a difference across phase and regression coefficients across groups, there was no opioid-sparing effect of pregabalin on alfentanil. Four subjects in phase I and five subjects in phase II did not complete the study. Two in phase I were technical failures, with the rest in both phases stopped because of side effects. Of the subjects who completed the study, six of 19 subjects in phase I and 11 of 12 subjects in phase II reported side effects.
Conclusions
When the intradermal capsaicin-induced pain model was used in healthy volunteers, oral pregabalin had no opioid-sparing effects on intravenous alfentanil. This experimental model may be useful in studying analgesic interactions.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Clinical Neurology,General Medicine