Increased food and water intake produced in rats by opiate receptor agonists
- 1 July 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 74 (3) , 217-220
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00427097
Abstract
It has been suggested that endogenous opiate mechanisms may be involved in the physiological control of food and water intake. Support for this hypothesis has been obtained from studies of the effects of narcotic antagonists which reduce feeding and drinking, but it is also necessary to show that food and water intake can be facilitated by opiate agonists. In the present study the food intake of freely-feeding rats was increased by subcutaneous injections of morphine, a stabilised enkephalin analogue (RX 783030), and ethylketocyclazocine. Water intake was also increased but this effect was more variable than the increased eating. The increased food intake produced by the putative mu receptor agonists morphine and RX 783030 was blocked by a dose of naloxone which did not affect the facilitation of eating produced by ethylketocyclazocine, which may act at a separate population of receptors known as kappa receptors. These data are consistent with the possibility that opiate receptors are involved in the control of feeding and drinking.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of opiate antagonists on food intake are stereospecificNeuropharmacology, 1981
- Stress-Induced Eating Is Mediated Through Endogenous OpiatesScience, 1980
- Eeg and behavioral effects of ethylketocyclazocine, morphine and cyclazocine in rats: Differential sensitivities towards naloxoneNeuropharmacology, 1980
- Naloxone reduction of stress-related feedingLife Sciences, 1980
- Evidence that opiate receptors mediate suppression of hypertonic saline-induced drinking in the mouse by narcotic antagonistsLife Sciences, 1980
- Suppression by naloxone of water intake induced by deprevation and hypertonic saline in intact and hypophysectomized ratsLife Sciences, 1980
- Suppressant effects of naltrexone on water intake in ratsPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1979
- The suppressant effects of naloxone on food and water intake in the ratBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1979
- Suppression of food intake and body weight gain by naloxone in ratsLife Sciences, 1979
- Suppression of appetitive behavior in the rat by naloxone: Lack of effect of prior morphine dependenceLife Sciences, 1979