Publication | Closed Access
Major disruptions of sleep during treatment of the opiate withdrawal syndrome: differences between methadone and lofexidine detoxification treatments
57
Citations
26
References
2003
Year
Opioid EpidemicSleep DisordersSubstance UseSleep DisturbancePharmacotherapyOpiate Withdrawal SyndromeTime AwakeAddiction MedicineMaximum Sleep DisruptionHealth SciencesLofexidine Detoxification TreatmentsSleepPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentInsomniaPharmacologySubstance AbuseSleep DisorderMajor DisruptionsAddictionOpioid OverdoseSleep ApneaMedicineOpioid Use Disorder
Sleep disturbance experienced during methadone or lofexidine opiate detoxification was investigated in 118 opiate-dependent patients receiving inpatient detoxification treatment. Sleep was assessed at four time-points during opiate detoxification using a self-report questionnaire. Maximum sleep disruption occurred at completion of detoxification and during the protracted withdrawal period, with patients in the methadone group reporting higher levels of withdrawal symptoms, lower overall sleep, longer sleep latencies and significantly longer periods of time awake than lofexidine patients. Regression analyses demonstrated a significant relationship between sleep disturbance, protracted withdrawal and retention in treatment, in addition to the major treatment benefit of reduced sleep disturbance conferred by lofexidine treatment.
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