Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³»­

Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³»­

Explore the latest content from across our publications

Log In

Forgot Password?
Create New Account

Loading... please wait

Abstract Details

Tramadol’s mystery withdrawal - should we worry about SNRI discontinuation syndrome?
Pain
P12 - Poster Session 12 (12:00 PM-1:00 PM)
6-007
N/A

Case: A 66-year-old male with chronic pain on tramadol (200 mg daily) presents to the ED with symptoms of restlessness and shaking concerning for seizures. After decades of opiate use for chronic pain, he decided to abruptly discontinue his tramadol. That evening he developed tremulousness, insomnia, confusion, hallucinations, and worsening gait instability. On presentation to the ED he had tachycardia, increased lacrimation/rhinorrhea, hyperreflexia, and marked akathisia.  Labs and neuroimaging were unremarkable. Neurology and psychiatry were consulted. Initially treated symptomatically for opiate withdrawal with minimal improvement. Given atypical presentation with predominate neurologic features and SNRI effects of tramadol, concern arose for a component of SNRI discontinuation syndrome. He was started on a venlafaxine taper with rapid amelioration of symptoms. 

N/A
Discussion: Tramadol is most known for its action as a mu-opioid receptor agonist, with its SNRI effects less well known. No case reports have yet described SNRI discontinuation syndrome as an effect of tramadol withdrawal. The tramadol molecule itself acts as a very weak opioid receptor agonist, while it’s metabolite O-desmethyltramadol is only slightly stronger. Its main action is through its SNRI properties, with a structure very similar to SNRIs. For poor CYP2D6-metabolizers tramadol has limited conversion to O-desmethyltramadol resulting in disproportionate SNRI effects with a limited opiate effect. In this case, symptoms associated with SNRI discontinuation syndrome predominated and were relieved with an SNRI taper.

Tramadol has both weak opiate and SNRI mechanisms of action. The proportion of opiate vs SNRI effect is unpredictable and affected by variations in CYP metabolism/inhibition. The unpredictable mechanism of action has important implications for the efficacy of tramadol in pain management and in the manifestations and treatment of withdrawal. SNRI discontinuation syndrome should be considered in patients with refractory or atypical symptoms in tramadol withdrawal, with SNRI taper considered as adjuvant treatment. 

Authors/Disclosures

PRESENTER
No disclosure on file