Combining the alpha-2 adrenergic agonist clonidine with naloxone rescues fentanyl-induced physiologic dysfunction and increases survival

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Abstract

Fentanyl leads to tens of thousands of overdose deaths every year despite widespread availability of naloxone. Like other opioids, fentanyl causes respiratory depression. Unlike morphine, high dose fentanyl rapidly produces airway obstruction, muscle rigidity, and cardiovascular failure. Using a rat model of opioid overdose, we compared the physiological effects of fentanyl and morphine and studied the efficacy of a novel rescue strategy. In contrast to morphine, we report that fentanyl more frequently causes respiratory failure secondary to vocal cord closure and leads to more severe cardiovascular disruption, including the blockade of baroreflex-like rebound in blood pressure. We also show that administration of intramuscular naloxone immediately after intravenous infusion of fentanyl did not improve survival. However, combining intramuscular naloxone with the alpha-2 adrenergic agonist clonidine rescued vocal cord function and stabilized cardiovascular and respiratory physiology from fentanyl-induced effects. Our findings demonstrate that fentanyl is associated with a unique and more severe toxidrome compared to morphine. Also, supplementing naloxone with drugs targeting the adrenergic system improves survival primarily by reopening the upper airway, implicating airway obstruction as a significant component of fentanyl-induced respiratory depression. Therefore, reversal of vocal cord closure appears to be the necessary precursor to the restoration of not only respiration, but also vascular autoregulation, a significant determinant of survival from fentanyl overdose.

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