Addiction-Like Severity Predicts Prolonged Oxycodone Withdrawal-Induced Allodynia in Genetically Diverse Rats

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This study found that addiction-like severity in genetically diverse rats predicted prolonged allodynia induced by oxycodone withdrawal.

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This study examined how the severity of addiction-like behaviors relates to the intensity and duration of opioid withdrawal-induced mechanical allodynia in Heterogeneous Stock rats. Rats had 12 hours/day intravenous oxycodone self-administration for long access, then mechanical sensitivity was measured at six timepoints across three weeks of abstinence and rats were stratified using an Addiction Index based on escalation of intake, motivation, tolerance, and acute withdrawal-induced pain sensitivity. Oxycodone withdrawal produced significant, prolonged allodynia up to three weeks, and High Addiction Index rats showed greater intensity and longer duration than Low Addiction Index rats; the association persisted even when allodynia was excluded from the index, indicating robustness. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Abstract Opioid withdrawal is associated with heightened pain sensitivity, including allodynia. Although opioid-induced allodynia is well-documented in humans and animal models, the relationship between the severity of opioid withdrawal-induced allodynia and individual addiction-like behaviors remains poorly understood. To address this gap, Heterogeneous Stock rats underwent long access (12 hours/day) intravenous oxycodone self-administration, followed by measurement of mechanical sensitivity at six timepoints across three weeks of abstinence. Rats were stratified by an Addiction Index derived from individual differences in the escalation of oxycodone intake, motivation to consume oxycodone, tolerance to oxycodone’s analgesic effects, and acute withdrawal-induced mechanical pain sensitivity. Here, we show that oxycodone withdrawal induces significant and prolonged allodynia for up to three weeks, with High Addiction Index rats exhibiting greater intensity and longer duration of pain sensitivity than Low Addiction Index rats. Results remained consistent even when excluding allodynia from the Addiction Index, highlighting the robustness of the association between addiction-like severity and protracted allodynia. Linear regression associations revealed that self-administration behaviors, particularly oxycodone intake escalation and motivation to seek oxycodone, predicted subsequent withdrawal-induced allodynia severity. These findings demonstrate that greater addiction-like severity is associated with more intense and prolonged withdrawal-induced pain, supporting mechanical allodynia as a marker of addiction severity. These results motivate future work to define the mechanisms linking addiction severity to protracted opioid withdrawal-induced pain, with the goal of informing targeted clinical interventions for individuals most susceptible to severe abstinence-related allodynia. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00