How opioid use disorder occurs

Opioid use — even short term — can lead to addiction and, too often, overdose. Find out how short-term pain relief leads to life-threatening problems.

By Mayo Clinic Staff

People who take opioids are at risk of opioid use disorder, often called opioid addiction. Personal history and how long people use opioids play a role. But it's impossible to tell who could become dependent and misuse opioids. The misuse of opioids — legal, illegal, stolen or shared — is the reason 90 people die in the U.S. every day on average, according to the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

Addiction is a condition where something that started as pleasurable now feels like something you can't live without. Drug addiction is defined as an out-of-control feeling that you must use a medicine or drug and continue to use it even though it causes harm over and over again. Opioids are highly addictive, largely because they trigger powerful reward centers in your brain.

Opioids trigger the release of endorphins. They tell your brain that you feel good. Endorphins make it less likely that you'll feel pain. They also boost feelings of pleasure. This creates a sense of well-being that is powerful but lasts only a short time. When an opioid dose wears off, you may find yourself wanting those good feelings back as soon as possible. This is how opioid use disorder can begin.

Short-term versus long-term effects

When you take opioids again and again over time, your body doesn't make as many endorphins. The same dose of opioids doesn't make you feel as good. This is called tolerance. One reason opioid use disorder is so common is that people who build up tolerance may feel like they must raise their doses to keep feeling good. They also may start having cravings for opioids. If they don't raise their doses, they may start having withdrawal symptoms, including worsening pain, goosebumps, anxiety, yawning and diarrhea.

Because of the risk of opioid misuse, it's often hard to get your healthcare professional to raise your dose or renew your prescription. Some opioid users who believe they need a bigger supply find illegal ways to get opioids or start using heroin. Some street drugs are laced with contaminants or much more powerful opioids such as fentanyl. The number of deaths from using heroin has gone up since more heroin now contains fentanyl.

If you're taking opioids and you've built up a tolerance, ask your healthcare professional for help. Other safe choices are available to help you make a change and keep feeling well. Don't stop opioid medicines without help from a healthcare professional. Quitting these medicines suddenly can cause serious withdrawal symptoms, including pain that's worse than it was before you started taking opioids. Your healthcare team can help you gradually and safely reduce the amount of opioids you take.

Risk factors for opioid use disorder

Opioids are most addictive when you take them in a way other than how they were prescribed — for example, crushing a pill so that it can be snorted or injected. This life-threatening drug misuse is even more dangerous if the pill is effective for a longer period of time. Rapidly delivering all the medicine to your body can cause an accidental overdose. Taking more than your prescribed dose of opioid medicine, or taking a dose more often than prescribed, also increases your risk of opioid use disorder.

How long you use prescribed opioids also plays a role. Researchers have found that taking opioid medicines for more than a few days raises your risk of long-term use. This makes it more likely that opioids will become addictive. After only five days of taking an opioid medicine, the chances increase that you'll still be taking opioids a year after starting a short course of the medicine.

Genetic, psychological and environmental factors also play a role in addiction, which can happen quickly or after many years of opioid use.

Risk of opioid addiction is greater for people who:

  • Are younger, specifically in their teens or early 20s.
  • Have a personal or family history of substance misuse.
  • Are living with stress, including being unemployed or living below the poverty line.
  • Have a history of problems with work, family and friends.
  • Have a history of taking part in crimes or having legal issues, including DUIs.
  • Have serious depression, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder.
  • Have a history of physical or sexual abuse.
  • Take part in risky or thrill-seeking behavior.
  • Perform poorly in school and do not value education.
  • Use tobacco heavily.

In addition, women have a unique set of risk factors for opioid use disorder. Women are more likely than men to have long-term pain. Compared with men, women also are more likely to be prescribed opioid medicines, to be given higher doses and to use opioids for longer periods of time. Women also may be more likely than men to become dependent on prescription pain relievers.

Steps to prevent opioid use disorder

Opioids are safest when used for three or fewer days to manage serious pain, such as pain that follows surgery or a bone fracture. If you need opioids for severe pain, work with your healthcare professional to take the lowest dose possible, for the shortest time needed, exactly as prescribed. Also, be sure to ask if drugs other than opioids are available or if other types of treatment can be used instead. And don't share your opioid medicines or take other people's opioids.

If you're living with lifelong pain, opioids aren't likely to be a safe and effective long-term treatment option. Many other treatments are available, including less addictive pain medicines and therapies that don't involve medicines. If possible, aim for a treatment plan that allows you to enjoy your life without opioids.

Help prevent opioid misuse in your family and community by storing opioid medicines securely while you use them. Get rid of unused opioids properly. In the U.S., find the closest Controlled Substance Public Disposal Locations on a website the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) maintains. Or contact your local law enforcement agency or your trash and recycling service for information about local medicine takeback programs. If no takeback program is available in your area, ask your pharmacist for help.

Everyone plays an important role in breaking the grip that opioids have on communities and their residents.

From Mayo Clinic to your inbox

Sign up for free and stay up to date on research advancements, health tips, current health topics, and expertise on managing health. Click here for an email preview.

To provide you with the most relevant and helpful information, and understand which information is beneficial, we may combine your email and website usage information with other information we have about you. If you are a Mayo Clinic patient, this could include protected health information. If we combine this information with your protected health information, we will treat all of that information as protected health information and will only use or disclose that information as set forth in our notice of privacy practices. You may opt-out of email communications at any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link in the e-mail.

July 20, 2024 See more In-depth

See also

  1. Medication-free hypertension control
  2. Alcohol: Does it affect blood pressure?
  3. Alpha blockers
  4. Ambien: Is dependence a concern?
  5. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors
  6. Angiotensin II receptor blockers
  7. Antidepressant withdrawal: Is there such a thing?
  8. Antidepressants and alcohol: What's the concern?
  9. Antidepressants and weight gain: What causes it?
  10. Antidepressants: Can they stop working?
  11. Antidepressants for children and teens
  12. Antidepressants: Side effects
  13. Antidepressants: Selecting one that's right for you
  14. Antidepressants: Which cause the fewest sexual side effects?
  15. Anxiety: A cause of high blood pressure?
  16. Atypical antidepressants
  17. Automated external defibrillators: Do you need an AED?
  18. Beta blockers
  19. Beta blockers: Do they cause weight gain?
  20. Beta blockers: How do they affect exercise?
  21. Bipolar disorder
  22. Bipolar disorder and alcoholism: Are they related?
  23. Bipolar disorder in children: Is it possible?
  24. Bipolar medications and weight gain
  25. Bipolar treatment: I vs. II
  26. Blood pressure: Can it be higher in one arm?
  27. Blood pressure chart
  28. Blood pressure cuff: Does size matter?
  29. Blood pressure: Does it have a daily pattern?
  30. Blood pressure: Is it affected by cold weather?
  31. Blood pressure medication: Still necessary if I lose weight?
  32. Blood pressure medications: Can they raise my triglycerides?
  33. Blood pressure readings: Why higher at home?
  34. Caffeine and hypertension
  35. Calcium channel blockers
  36. Calcium supplements: Do they interfere with blood pressure drugs?
  37. Can whole-grain foods lower blood pressure?
  38. Central-acting agents
  39. Choosing blood pressure medicines
  40. Clinical depression: What does that mean?
  41. Depression and anxiety: Can I have both?
  42. Depression, anxiety and exercise
  43. What is depression? A Mayo Clinic expert explains.
  44. Depression in women: Understanding the gender gap
  45. Depression (major depressive disorder)
  46. Depression: Supporting a family member or friend
  47. Diuretics
  48. Diuretics: A cause of low potassium?
  49. High blood pressure and exercise
  50. Free blood pressure machines: Are they accurate?
  51. Home blood pressure monitoring
  52. Heart arrhythmia
  53. Heart Rhythm Conditions
  54. High blood pressure (hypertension)
  55. High blood pressure and cold remedies: Which are safe?
  56. High blood pressure and sex
  57. High blood pressure dangers
  58. How to tell if a loved one is abusing opioids
  59. What is hypertension? A Mayo Clinic expert explains.
  60. Hypertension FAQs
  61. Hypertensive crisis: What are the symptoms?
  62. Insomnia
  63. Insomnia: How do I stay asleep?
  64. Insomnia treatment: Cognitive behavioral therapy instead of sleeping pills
  65. Intervention: Help a loved one overcome addiction
  66. Isolated systolic hypertension: A health concern?
  67. Kratom: Unsafe and ineffective
  68. Kratom for opioid withdrawal
  69. Lack of sleep: Can it make you sick?
  70. L-arginine: Does it lower blood pressure?
  71. Low blood pressure (hypotension)
  72. Male depression: Understanding the issues
  73. MAOIs and diet: Is it necessary to restrict tyramine?
  74. Marijuana and depression
  75. Medications and supplements that can raise your blood pressure
  76. Menopause and high blood pressure: What's the connection?
  77. Mental health: Overcoming the stigma of mental illness
  78. Mental health providers: Tips on finding one
  79. Mental illness
  80. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
  81. Natural remedies for depression: Are they effective?
  82. Nervous breakdown: What does it mean?
  83. Opioid stewardship: What is it?
  84. Pain and depression: Is there a link?
  85. Picnic Problems: High Sodium
  86. Prescription drug abuse
  87. Prescription sleeping pills: What's right for you?
  88. Pulse pressure: An indicator of heart health?
  89. Reactive attachment disorder
  90. Resperate: Can it help reduce blood pressure?
  91. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
  92. Serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs)
  93. Sleep deprivation: A cause of high blood pressure?
  94. Stress and high blood pressure
  95. Tapering off opioids: When and how
  96. Teen depression
  97. Teen drug abuse
  98. Nutrition and pain
  99. Pain rehabilitation
  100. Self-care approaches to treating pain
  101. Treatment-resistant depression
  102. Tricyclic antidepressants
  103. Unexplained weight loss
  104. Valerian: A safe and effective herbal sleep aid?
  105. Vasodilators
  106. How to measure blood pressure using a manual monitor
  107. How to measure blood pressure using an automatic monitor
  108. What is blood pressure?
  109. Vitamin B-12 and depression
  110. Can a lack of vitamin D cause high blood pressure?
  111. What are opioids and why are they dangerous?
  112. White coat hypertension
  113. Wrist blood pressure monitors: Are they accurate?
  114. Mayo Clinic Minute: Do not share pain medication
  115. Mayo Clinic Minute: Avoid opioids for chronic pain
  116. Mayo Clinic Minute: Be careful not to pop pain pills