Activation and expression of endogenous pain control mechanisms in rats given repeated nociceptive tests under the influence of naloxone.
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Behavioral Neuroscience
- Vol. 101 (1) , 87-103
- https://doi.org/10.1037//0735-7044.101.1.87
Abstract
In six experiments, it was found that animals administered the opiate receptor blocker naloxone prior to either hot-plate or tail-flick nociceptive tests developed reduced sensitivity to pain relative to animals tested under saline. The naloxone-induced analgesia was most pronounced following administration of 10 mg/kg naloxone, with weaker effects occurring at 0.5 and 2 mg/kg. The effect manifested itself in tests using mild (48.5.degree. hot-plate tests), but not more severe (52.degree. or 56.degree. hot-plate tests), intensities of nociceptive stimulation. The analgesia observed in animals tested under naloxone arose in part from the attentuation of the habituation of stress-induced analgesia produced by the novelty of the test apparatus, and in part from exposure to nociceptive stimulation. It appears to be mediated by a nonopiate mechanism; naloxone enhanced the analgesia produced by exposure to brief, continuous shock, but blocked the analgesia elicited by prolonged, intermittent shock (see Lewis, Cannon, and Liebeskind, 1980). We also found that administration of naloxone prior to nociceptive testing enhanced the development of conditioned autoanalgesia (as assessed by nociceptive tests conducted under saline), and that the enhanced conditioned autoanalgesia summated with the analgesic effect of morphine. The results are discussed in terms of the activation and expression of both opiate and nonopiate pain suppression mechanisms; their implications for models of situation specific morphine analgesic tolerance are discussed.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conditional hyperalgesia is elicited by environmental signals of morphineBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1981
- Antagonism of stress-induced analgesia by D-phenylalanine, an anti-enkephalinasePharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1980
- Lack of effect of naloxone on autoanalgesiaPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1979
- Lack of cross-tolerance between morphine and autoanalgesiaPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1979
- Exposure to a nonfunctional hot plate as a factor in the assessment of morphine-induced analgesia and analgesic tolerance in ratsPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1979
- Behavioral and physiological studies of non-narcotic analgesia in the rat elicited by certain environmental stimuliBrain Research, 1978
- Endogenous opioid ligands may mediate stress-induced changes in the affective properties of pain related behavior in ratsLife Sciences, 1978
- The role of predrug signals in morphine analgesic tolerance: Support for a Pavlovian conditioning model of tolerance.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 1978
- Footshock induced analgesia in mice: Its reversal by naloxone and cross tolerance with morphineLife Sciences, 1977
- Morphine Analgesic Tolerance: Its Situation Specificity Supports a Pavlovian Conditioning ModelScience, 1976