Is an individual with opiate tolerance also tolerant to the unwanted side effect of respiratory depression? Googling for info produces mixed results... what's the truth?
If people with high tolerance are resistant to respiratory depression then how is it possible for heroin addicts to OD?
People are not resistant to respiratory depression. Even if someone has a high tolerance there is still a higher dose which could kill them, I really don't think anyone
ever has
such a high tolerance that there is no dose that would cause them dangerous respiratory depression (and you can die in other ways too). Being "tolerant" to opioids doesn't mean the person has become
immune to their effects. It just means they have developed a substantial amount of tolerance to the desired effect so they would require a higher dose to achieve it than a person without tolerance. Tolerance to different aspects of opioid effects such as euphoria, pain relief, pupil constriction and respiratory depression happens at different rates (as I alluded to in my post from another thread that you quoted above). I have read a few studies on that.
Some ways in which experienced heroin users OD are:
- street heroin is never pure so potency can vary a lot from source to source/batch to batch (even from the same supplier) and so people will do their usual amount, only to find out it's much stronger
- people are chasing the high and trying to get as high as possible, and as I said there is a fine line between high and dead
- people assume that if they don't feel very high that they aren't at risk of an OD from increasing their dose
- people will use other CNS-depressant drugs, such as benzos, close to the same time (a cause of lots of ODs)
- tolerance is complex and not static, it can be affected by lots of things, even your location (a lot of ODs happen when in an unfamiliar place because tolerance is reduced)