151. Stress indices in methadone maintenance treatment - Cross sectional and follow up study.
- Author
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Peles E, Malik E, Altman Y, Baharav A, Schreiber S, Sason A, and Adelson M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Hydrocortisone blood, Male, Middle Aged, Opiate Substitution Treatment methods, Opioid-Related Disorders blood, Prospective Studies, Stress, Psychological blood, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Methadone therapeutic use, Opiate Substitution Treatment psychology, Opioid-Related Disorders psychology, Opioid-Related Disorders therapy, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
To study the prevalence of perceived high stress among methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) patients, and whether stress can predict outcome, and whether stress may improve during treatment, we studied a sample of 107 MMT patients using Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) questionnaires. We studied if PSS scores on admission predict long-term retention, and we monitored stress indices (PSS, heart rate variability, saliva cortisol) on admission, 6 and 12 months later, to measure changes. Variables included demographic data, history of adverse events, and urine test. A sample of 79 (73.8%) males and 28 (26.2%) females whose age at opioid use onset was 22.1±7.2 years and age at study onset 50.5±10.8 years was studied for PSS. Both high and very-high PSS patients characterized (logistic regression) as abusing benzodiazepine, and with history of depressive symptoms. The very-high PSS group on admission (n=29) had shorter cumulative retention (1.8 years, 95%%CI 1.2-2.4) compared with 50 others (2.8 years, 95%%CI 2.3-3.3, p=0.03). Monitoring stress indices among 25 patients found that no-benzodiazepine and cocaine use on admission, opioid discontinuation after 6 months, and any substance discontinuation after a year were associated with stress reduction. Conclusion: stress level appears to normalize among MMT patients if no other substance is abused., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All authors have no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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