Acute analgesic effects of nicotine and tobacco in humans: a meta-analysis

Although animal models have consistently demonstrated acute pain inhibitory effects of nicotine and tobacco, human experimental studies have yielded mixed results. The main goal of this meta-analysis was to quantify the effects of nicotine/tobacco administration on human experimental pain threshold...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pain (Amsterdam) 2016-07, Vol.157 (7), p.1373-1381
Hauptverfasser: Ditre, Joseph W., Heckman, Bryan W., Zale, Emily L., Kosiba, Jesse D., Maisto, Stephen A.
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container_issue 7
container_start_page 1373
container_title Pain (Amsterdam)
container_volume 157
creator Ditre, Joseph W.
Heckman, Bryan W.
Zale, Emily L.
Kosiba, Jesse D.
Maisto, Stephen A.
description Although animal models have consistently demonstrated acute pain inhibitory effects of nicotine and tobacco, human experimental studies have yielded mixed results. The main goal of this meta-analysis was to quantify the effects of nicotine/tobacco administration on human experimental pain threshold and tolerance ratings. A search of PubMed and PsycINFO online databases identified 13 eligible articles, including k = 21 tests of pain tolerance (N = 393) and k = 15 tests of pain threshold (N = 339). Meta-analytic integration for both threshold and tolerance outcomes revealed that nicotine administered through tobacco smoke and other delivery systems (eg, patch, nasal spray) produced acute analgesic effects that may be characterized as small to medium in magnitude (Hedges g = 0.35, 95% confidence interval = 0.21-0.50). Publication bias-corrected estimates remained significant and indicated that these effects may be closer to small. Sex composition was observed to be a significant moderator, such that pain threshold effects were more robust among samples that included more men than women. These results help to clarify a mixed literature and may ultimately help to inform the treatment of both pain and nicotine dependence. Pain and tobacco smoking are both highly prevalent and comorbid conditions. Current smoking has been associated with more severe chronic pain and physical impairment. Acute nicotine-induced analgesia could make smoking more rewarding and harder to give up. Future research should use dynamic measures of experimental pain reactivity and further explore biopsychosocial mechanisms of action.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Analgesics - pharmacology
Analgesics - therapeutic use
Humans
Nicotine - pharmacology
Nicotine - therapeutic use
Pain - drug therapy
Pain Threshold - drug effects
Tobacco Products
title Acute analgesic effects of nicotine and tobacco in humans: a meta-analysis
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