Gastroenterology

Gastroenterology

Volume 118, Issue 2, February 2000, Pages 431-432
Gastroenterology

Case Reports
Florid opioid withdrawal–like reaction precipitated by naltrexone in a patient with chronic cholestasis

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Abstract

Findings consistent with the hypothesis that increased central opioidergic tone contributes to the pruritus of cholestasis provide a rationale for treating this form of pruritus with opiate antagonists. However, initiation of therapy with an opiate antagonist in a cholestatic patient may precipitate a transient opioid withdrawal–like reaction. A woman with chronic cholestasis and disabling pruritus experienced severe transient opioid withdrawal–like reactions after oral administration of 12.5 and 2 mg naltrexone. Subsequently, naloxone was administered by intravenous infusion. Initially, the infusion rate was low and subtherapeutic. It was gradually increased to a rate known to be effective in inducing opioid antagonism. Oral naltrexone was then reintroduced without any reaction occurring. During the ensuing 12 months, while taking naltrexone, 25 mg daily, the patient has been completely free from pruritus. These observations strongly support the hypothesis that increased central opioidergic tone is a component of the pathophysiology of cholestasis.

GASTROENTEROLOGY 2000;118:431-432

Section snippets

Case report

A 35-year-old woman presented in 1992 with severe persistent generalized pruritus and fatigue. Physical examination revealed increased skin pigmentation and excoriations. Results of laboratory investigations included the following: total bilirubin, 10 μmol/L; alkaline phosphatase, 243 U/L; γ-glutamyl transpeptidase; 149 U/L; and positivity for mitochondrial antibodies. A liver biopsy specimen showed nonsuppurative cholangitis and lymphocytic infiltration of expanded portal tracts that contained

Discussion

The extraordinary sensitivity of our patient to an initial oral dose of the opiate antagonist naltrexone could not be predicted from relevant previously published experience.2, 3, 4, 5 Our observations that a small dose of an opiate antagonist precipitated florid opioid withdrawal–like reactions in a patient with chronic cholestasis, who had not received an opiate, provide further support for the hypothesis that central opioidergic tone is increased in cholestasis.1 They also suggest that, when

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Address requests for reprints to: E. Anthony Jones, M.D., Department of Gastrointestinal and Liver Diseases, Academic Medical Center, 1105 AZ Amsterdam-ZO, The Netherlands. e-mail: [email protected]; fax: (31) 20-691-7033.

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