Health
Painkiller abuse ups risk of depression
New York, Feb 15
Patients who frequently
consume opioid medicines or painkillers to manage chronic pain are more
likely to experience depression, says a new research.
Previous
research had found depression to be linked with patients' opioid use,
but this study has identified the association between an increase in
opioid use and an increase in depression.
Jeffrey Scherrer,
associate professor for family and community medicine at the Saint Louis
University in the US, and his colleagues studied questionnaires from
355 patients who reported chronic low back pain initially and at
one-year and two-year follow ups.
The patients also reported the number of years they had been suffering from chronic pain.
"Better
understanding of temporal relationship between opioids and depression,
and the dose of opioids that places patients at risk for depression may
inform prescribing, pain management and improve outcomes for patients
with chronic, non-cancer pain," Scherrer wrote.
Contributing
factors for cases of new-onset depression, according to this study and
previous research conducted, may include both the amount of daily
morphine exposure and the duration of exposure.
"This would
expand intervention targets to limit the risk of depression in patients
who need long-term opioid therapy," he added.
The study appeared in the journal Pain.












