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Opioids, sex and gender

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Sex is a major factor for pain modulation. Significant evidences have shown that pain experience is different between men and women, as well as the response to opioid system activation and its analgesic effects. There are evidences that women have lower pain threshold compared to men. Opioid neurotransmitters and their receptors are centrally involved with stress response, pain suppression and opioids analgesic action. This study aimed to illustrate the relationship between sex, gender and the opioid system and to discuss the relevance of one of the most intriguing aspects of pain physiology: differences between sex and gender, opioid system and opioids analgesic response. CONTENTS: A literature review on opioids, sex and gender, aiming to show current data on pain experience between men and women, central opioid activation and response to opioids. CONCLUSION: Data in the literature and ongoing studies indicate that sex is probably responsible for differences in opioid analgesia between men and women, but the direction and magnitude of such differences depend on interacting variables. Socio-cultural and biological factors, including hormonal variations in women and the presence of male hormone in men are important factors interacting with pain perception and opioid analgesic response.

Gender; Opioid analgesics; Pain; Sex


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