Five out of 20 patients participating in an injectable methadone research program, with a mean dose of 70 mg (SD=20) and a mean frequency of 5.1 injections/week (SD=0.7), developed red skin lesions and pain in the forearm and arm during and after intravenous methadone injection under clinical supervision. The patients showed slightly raised round red lesions with an annular border, some measuring up to 3 inches in diameter. The lesions were always proximal to the injection site but did not reappear after each injection. Occasionally, the lesions overlaid the veins along several dozen inches, sometimes with a lesion-free segment and other times continuously. Because most of the injections are administered to the arm or hand, most of the lesions were located on the arm. The lesions were associated with pain along the relevant vein and disappeared within 10 minutes to 2 hours after injection.