Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • bradycardia (1)
  • brain (4)
  • brain hypoxia (6)
  • fentanyl (6)
  • foreign (1)
  • heroin (6)
  • humans (1)
  • hypothermia (3)
  • hypoxia (1)
  • locomotor activity (1)
  • nucleus accumbens (1)
  • opioids (3)
  • oxygen (6)
  • phase (2)
  • rapid (1)
  • rats (2)
  • vital (1)
  • weak (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Xylazine has emerged in recent years as an adulterant in an increasing number of opioid-positive overdose deaths in the United States. Although its exact role in opioid-induced overdose deaths is largely unknown, xylazine is known to depress vital functions and cause hypotension, bradycardia, hypothermia, and respiratory depression. In this study, we examined the brain-specific hypothermic and hypoxic effects of xylazine and its mixtures with fentanyl and heroin in freely moving rats. In the temperature experiment, we found that intravenous xylazine at low, human-relevant doses (0.33, 1.0, 3.0 mg/kg) dose-dependently decreases locomotor activity and induces modest but prolonged brain and body hypothermia. In the electrochemical experiment, we found that xylazine at the same doses dose-dependently decreases nucleus accumbens oxygenation. In contrast to relatively weak and prolonged decreases induced by xylazine, intravenous fentanyl (20 μg/kg) and heroin (600 μg/kg) induce stronger biphasic brain oxygen responses, with the initial rapid and strong decrease, resulting from respiratory depression, followed by a slower, more prolonged increase reflecting a post-hypoxic compensatory phase, with fentanyl acting much quicker than heroin. The xylazine-fentanyl mixture eliminated the hyperoxic phase of oxygen response and prolonged brain hypoxia, suggesting xylazine-induced attenuation of the brain's compensatory mechanisms to counteract brain hypoxia. The xylazine-heroin mixture strongly potentiated the initial oxygen decrease, and the pattern lacked the hyperoxic portion of the biphasic oxygen response, suggesting more robust and prolonged brain hypoxia. These findings suggest that xylazine exacerbates the life-threatening effects of opioids, proposing worsened brain hypoxia as the mechanism contributing to xylazine-positive opioid-overdose deaths. © 2023. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.

    Citation

    Shinbe Choi, Matthew R Irwin, Eugene A Kiyatkin. Xylazine effects on opioid-induced brain hypoxia. Psychopharmacology. 2023 Jul;240(7):1561-1571

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37340247

    View Full Text