Autonomic and Affective Mediators of the Relationship Between Mindfulness and Opioid Craving Among Chronic Pain Patients

Prescription opioid misuse among chronic pain patients is undergirded by self-regulatory deficits, affective distress, and opioid-cue reactivity. Dispositional mindfulness has been associated with enhanced self-regulation, lower distress, and adaptive autonomic responses following drug-cue exposure....

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology 2019-02, Vol.27 (1), p.55-63
Hauptverfasser: Baker, Anne K., Garland, Eric L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prescription opioid misuse among chronic pain patients is undergirded by self-regulatory deficits, affective distress, and opioid-cue reactivity. Dispositional mindfulness has been associated with enhanced self-regulation, lower distress, and adaptive autonomic responses following drug-cue exposure. We hypothesized that dispositional mindfulness might serve as a protective factor among opioid-treated chronic pain patients. We examined heart-rate variability (HRV) during exposure to opioid cues and depressed mood as mediators of the association between dispositional mindfulness and opioid craving. Data were obtained from a sample of chronic pain patients (N = 115) receiving long-term opioid pharmacotherapy. Participants self-reported opioid craving and depression, and HRV was measured during an opioid-cue dot-probe task. Dispositional mindfulness was significantly positively correlated with HRV, and HRV was significantly inversely associated with opioid craving. Dispositional mindfulness was significantly negatively correlated with depression, and depression was significantly positively correlated with opioid craving. Path analysis revealed significant indirect effects of dispositional mindfulness on craving through both HRV and depression. Dispositional mindfulness may buffer against opioid craving among chronic pain patients prescribed opioids; this buffering effect may be a function of improved autonomic and affective responses. Public Health Significance This study provides evidence that mindfulness as a personality trait may be associated with lower rates of opioid craving by way of adaptive autonomic responses, and either lower levels of negative emotion or higher capacity for emotion regulation. This research helps identify possible mechanisms of recovery from opioid misuse, allowing interventions to be more carefully tailored to combat this rising public-health epidemic.
ISSN:1064-1297
1936-2293
DOI:10.1037/pha0000225