Long Term Suboxone™ Emotional Reactivity As Measured by Automatic Detection in Speech https://t.co/sY7VG2DqRz
We use an Interactive Voice Response system that called patients on their telephone in their natural environment, collected momentary emotional states in a 15-second dialogue that reduces subject burden typical of pen-a https://t.co/e0D8ynS9lH
Long Term Suboxone™ Emotional Reactivity As Measured by Automatic Detection in Speech https://t.co/e0D8ynS9lH
@maiasz @Peter_Grinspoon Do people on Naltrexone report reduced sexual pleasure? How does that compare to opioid agonists? What about emotional vitality? https://t.co/WFAj8PWW4h
If you think MAT recovery is a life long alternative to abstinence follow this early research path. https://t.co/upoYRXnlOP
@ADAWnews @jonathan_giftos @DrSidMukherjee @howell_ben @adfoxMD @AvaSkovdottir @DrMelissaWeimer @SharpePotter @nytimes @maiasz @DrSarahWakeman @LeoBeletsky This study “found long-term SUBX patients had a significantly flat affect (p<0.01), and they had
@jonathan_giftos @BrookeM_Feldman It’s the effect of the opioid. Don’t forget kappa receptor (not just mu). Emotional flattening, lack of sex drive, something is “off” and it’s their connection to organic human suffering and joy that’s hijacked. https://t.
long-term SUBX use shows flat affect, ⬇️self-awareness of being happy, sad, and anxious compared to GP + AA groups. https://t.co/WFAj8PWW4h
@DrMate https://t.co/vwPteIGdfp @maiasz
Long-term Suboxone produces diff in processing emotions, less self-awareness altered emotional resp 2 stimuli https://t.co/TDKQCuhHCz
@FastMedRx Suboxone blunts emotions. https://t.co/LUB3s3D343 •BLUNTED response to pleasance •HEIGHTENED response to unpleasance @judystarz1
@sandypants75 @drdrew Here is another article that suggests affective flattening in Suboxone users: https://t.co/WFAj8PWW4h
@maiasz But, to use your version of sub-optimal Pubmed stuff: https://t.co/WFAj8PWW4h