Abstract
Although opioid-induced nausea and vomiting (OINV) is common and debilitating, its mechanism is still unclear. Recently, we suggested that opioids affect semicircular canal function and that this leads to a mismatch between canal input and other sensory information during head motion, which triggers OINV. Here, we assess if visual input is relevant for this mismatch. In a randomized-controlled crossover study 14 healthy men (26.9±3.4 years, mean ±SD) were tested twice, once blindfolded and once with eyes open, with at least one-day washout. The opioid remifentanil was administered intravenously (0.15 μg/kg/min) for 60 minutes. After a thirty-minutes resting period, subjects' head and trunk were passively moved. Nausea was rated before remifentanil start (T0 ), before the movement intervention (T30 ) and after 60 minutes (T60 ) of administration. At rest (T0 , T30 ), median nausea ratings were zero whether subjects were blindfolded or not. Movement triggered nausea independently of visual input (nausea rating 1.5/3.0 (median/interquartile range) in the blindfolded, 2.5/6 in the eyes-open condition, ?2 (1) = 1.3, p = 0.25). As movement exacerbates OINV independently of visual input, a clash between visual and semicircular canal information is not the relevant trigger for OINV. To prevent OINV, emphasis should be put on head-rest, eye-closure is less important.
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CITATION STYLE
Heuser, F., Schulz, C., Saǧlam, M., Ramaioli, C., Heuberger, M., Wagner, K. J., … Lehnen, N. (2017). Preventing opioid-induced nausea and vomiting: Rest your head and close your eyes? PLoS ONE, 12(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173925
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