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Title

Enhancement of Meditation Analgesia by Opioid Antagonist in Experienced Meditators.

Authors

May LM, Kosek P, Zeidan F, Berkman ET.

Journal

Psychosom Med.

Year

2018

Vol (Issue)

Epub ahead of print

Page

doi

10.1097/PSY.0000000000000580.

PMID

29595707

Url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29595707

MeSH

Keywords

Meditation; Analgesia; Pain Relief; Naloxone; Opioid Antagonist

한글 키워드

명상; 통각상실증; 통증 완화; 날록손; 아편 유사물질 길항제

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Summary & Commentary

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Korean Study

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
Studies have consistently shown that long-term meditation practice is associated with reduced pain, but the neural mechanisms by which long-term meditation practice reduces pain remain unclear. This study tested endogenous opioid involvement in meditation analgesia associated with long-term meditation practice.

METHODS:
Electrical pain was induced with randomized, double-blind, cross-over administration of the opioid antagonist Naloxone (0.15mg/kg bolus dose, then 0.2mg/kg/hr infusion dose) with 32 healthy, experienced meditation practitioners and a standardized open monitoring meditation.

RESULTS:
Under saline, pain ratings were significantly lower during meditation (pain intensity: 6.41 ± 1.32; pain unpleasantness: 3.98 ± 2.17) than at baseline (pain intensity: 6.86 ±1.04, t(31) = 2.476, p = 0.019, Cohen's d = 0.46; pain unpleasantness: 4.96 ±1.75, t(31) = 3.746, p = 0.001, Cohen's d = 0.68), confirming the presence of meditation analgesia. Comparing saline and Naloxone revealed significantly lower pain intensity (t(31) = 3.12, p = 0.004, d = 0.56), and pain unpleasantness (t(31) = 3.47, p = 0.002, d = 0.62), during meditation under Naloxone (pain intensity: 5.53 ± 1.54; pain unpleasantness: 2.95 ± 1.88) than under saline (pain intensity: 6.41 ± 1.32; pain unpleasantness: 3.98 ± 2.17). Naloxone not only failed to eliminate meditation analgesia, it made meditation analgesia stronger.

CONCLUSIONS:
Long-term meditation practice does not rely on endogenous opioids to reduce pain. Naloxone's blockade of opioid receptors enhanced meditation analgesia; pain ratings during meditation were significantly lower under Naloxone than under saline. Possible biological mechanisms by which Naloxone-induced opioid receptor blockade enhances meditation analgesia are discussed.

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