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Subjective and psychomotor effects of carisoprodol in combination with oxycodone in healthy volunteers.

Author(s): Zacny JP, Paice JA, Coalson DW

Affiliation(s): Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.

Publication date & source: 2011-08-12, Drug Alcohol Depend., [Epub ahead of print]

BACKGROUND: Some chronic pain patients on long-term opioid therapy also take centrally active skeletal muscle relaxants. One of those muscle relaxants is carisoprodol, a drug that is abused and capable of producing impairment. It would be of relevance to characterize the effects of an opioid and carisoprodol when taken together to determine if abuse liability-related measures and psychomotor impairment are increased compared to when the drugs are taken alone. METHODS: As part of a larger crossover, randomized, double-blind study, we examined the subjective and psychomotor responses of 15 healthy volunteers to four experimental conditions: placebo, 350mg carisoprodol, 10mg oxycodone, and 350mg carisoprodol followed 60min later by 10mg oxycodone (intended to test the interaction of the two drugs when they were producing their maximal effects). RESULTS: Preliminary data analyses indicated that some of carisoprodol's effects were declining when we tested for drug interactions. Despite this, on some outcome measures in which the drugs alone did not differ from placebo, when tested together subjective effects were increased, including those that were abuse liability-related, and psychomotor performance decreased, relative to placebo. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study that we are aware of that has shown that carisoprodol and oxycodone, two drugs that are sometimes co-prescribed for relief of pain, produce effects when administered "together" (i.e., separated by 60min) that are of greater magnitude than when they are administered alone. Some of the effects were not benign, and are of concern from both abuse liability and public safety standpoints. Copyright (c) 2011. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.

Page last updated: 2011-12-09

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