Brain noradrenergic systems have been shown to be altered in opioid dependence and to mediate aspects of opioid withdrawal.
Pre-clinical and clinical studies by others have shown that yohimbine, which increases noradrenergic activity, also increases
both baseline and fear enhancement of the magnitude of the acoustic startle response (ASR). In a separate report from this
experiment, it was shown that yohimbine produced opioid withdrawal-like symptoms, including anxiety, in clinically stable
methadone-maintained patients and also produced elevations in the norepinepherine (NE) metabolite, 3-methoxy-4 hydroxyphenethyleneglycol
(MHPG), and cortisol serum levels. The current study reports the effects of intravenous yohimbine hydrochloride, 0.4 mg/kg
versus saline (double-blind), on ASR magnitude, plasma MHPG, and cortisol levels in eight methadone-maintained patients and
13 healthy subjects in a double-blind fashion. Yohimbine increased startle magnitude in both groups. There was no basal (placebo
day) difference between the startle response of the two groups, but methadone patients had a larger startle magnitude increase
in response to yohimbine than healthy controls. Methadone-maintained patients had lower baseline plasma levels of MHPG and
similar baseline plasma cortisol levels compared with normal subjects. Yohimbine caused significant elevation in cortisol
and MHPG in both groups. Methadone-maintained subjects had higher elevations in cortisol levels and MHPG (methadone main effect)
levels in response to yohimbine. However, when MHPG levels were corrected for baseline differences by analysis of covariance
(ANCOVA), the yohimbine effect, but not the methadone effect remained statistically significant. These results are consistent
with the previous report and support the hypothesis that abnormalities of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and
of noradrenergic mechanisms of stress response persist in opioid-agonist maintenance. The ASR effect extends the previous
report and provides an additional objective measure for perturbation of noradrenergic and stress responses in these patients.
Methadone Noradrenergic Opioid Startle Yohimbine Hormone HPA axis
Electronic Publication