Combined effects of methadone and quetiapine on respiratory rate, haemodynamic variables, and temperature in conscious rats

Fatal poisonings where both methadone and quetiapine are detected post‐mortem occurs frequently in legal autopsy cases. It is unclear whether quetiapine increases the risk of fatal methadone poisoning or if it is merely detected due to widespread use. We hypothesized that methadone and quetiapine wo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addiction biology 2023-09, Vol.28 (9), p.e13320-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Andersen, Freja Drost, Steffensen, Simon Comerma, Vistisen, Simon Tilma, Pinilla, Estefano, Pedersen, Tina Myhre, Matchkov, Vladimir, Simonsen, Ulf, Andersen, Charlotte Uggerhøj
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fatal poisonings where both methadone and quetiapine are detected post‐mortem occurs frequently in legal autopsy cases. It is unclear whether quetiapine increases the risk of fatal methadone poisoning or if it is merely detected due to widespread use. We hypothesized that methadone and quetiapine would have additive toxic effects on respiratory rate, blood pressure, and the QTc‐interval. To investigate this hypothesis, we used telemetry implants for measurements of respiratory rate, haemodynamic variables, the velocity of blood pressure changes, temperature, and movement in conscious, freely moving male Wistar rats aged 12–13 weeks. The combined effects of three accumulative i.p. doses of methadone (2.5, 10, 15 mg/kg) and quetiapine (3, 10, 30 mg/kg) were compared to rats treated with the same doses of each drug alone, and a vehicle‐treated group in a randomized investigator blinded study. No additive effects of quetiapine and methadone on respiratory rate, haemodynamic variables, or movement were observed. However, body temperature was significantly lower by approximately 1.5°C on average in the group treated with both methadone and quetiapine (15 + 30 mg/kg) compared to the other groups. This indicates a synergistic effect of quetiapine and methadone on thermoregulation, which may increase the risk of fatal poisoning. We suggest studying this finding further in human settings. As it is unclear whether quetiapine increases the risk of fatal methadone poisoning, the combined effects of three accumulated doses of methadone, and quetiapine was investigated in conscious freely moving rats using telemetry and compared to vehicle and treatment with each drug alone. No additive effects on respiratory rate or haemodynamic variables were observed. However, the two drugs seemed to lower body temperature synergistically. We suggest studying this finding further in human settings.
ISSN:1355-6215
1369-1600
DOI:10.1111/adb.13320