EVALUATION OF DISCRIMINATIVE EFFECTS OF MORPHINE IN RAT
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 198 (1) , 54-65
Abstract
The discriminative effects produced by morphine in the rat were evaluated using a 2-choice, discrete trial avoidance task. Stimulus control of behavior was attained with a dose of morphine 1/3-1/10 of that used in previous studies. Morphine produced dose-related discriminative effects over a 100-fold dose range. The stimulus control produced by the discriminative effects of morphine met the following criteria for classification as a specific narcotic effect: oxymorphone, levorphanol, methadone and meperidine, narcotic analgesics from diverse chemical families, also produced dose-related morphine-like discriminative effects: dextrorphan and thebaine, compounds structurally related to the narcotics but lacking narcotic activity, failed to produce morphine-like discriminative effects; effects were blocked by the narcotic antagonist naloxone; and tolerance to the discriminative effects developed upon the repeated administration of morphine and cross-tolerance extended to methadone. The discriminative effects produced by morphine were further characterized by evaluating the capacity of prototypes of other classes of psychoactive drugs to produce morphine-like discriminative effects. Profadol and pentazocine, euphorogenic analgesics with mixed agonist and narcotic antagonist properties, produced dose-related morphine-like discriminative effects whereas cyclazocine, a dysphorogenic analgesic with mixed agonist and narcotic antagonist properties, did not. The nonopioid psychoactive drugs d-amphetamine, pentobarbital and chlorpromazine also failed to produce morphine-like discriminative effects. Thus, morphine-like discriminative effects were produced uniquely by the narcotic analgesics and euphorogenic analgesics with mixed agonist and narcotic antagonist properties. The component of action of morphine that enables it to function as a discriminative stimulus in the rat is analogous to the component of action of morphine responsible for producing subjective effects in man.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- HUMAN PHARMACOLOGY AND ABUSE POTENTIAL OF N-ALLYLNOROXYMORPHONE (NALOXONE)1967
- Development of Scales Based on Patterns of Drug Effects, Using the Addiction Research Center Inventory (ARCI)Psychological Reports, 1966
- DEMONSTRATION OF TOLERANCE TO AND PHYSICAL DEPENDENCE ON N-ALLYLNORMORPHINE (NALORPHINE)1965
- NOCICEPTIVE THRESHOLDS AS AFFECTED BY PARENTERAL ADMINISTRATION OF IRRITANTS AND OF VARIOUS ANTINOCICEPTIVE DRUGS1965
- The Addiction Research Center Inventory: Standardization of scales which evaluate subjective effects of morphine, amphetamine, pentobarbital, alcohol, LSD-25, pyrahexyl and chlorpromazinePsychopharmacology, 1963
- INTERRESPONSE TIME AS A FUNCTION OF CONTINUOUS VARIABLES: A NEW METHOD AND SOME DATA1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1963
- METHODS FOR EVALUATING ADDICTION LIABILITY .A. ATTITUDE OF OPIATE ADDICTS TOWARD OPIATE-LIKEDRUGS .B. SHORT-TERM DIRECT ADDICTION TEST1961
- COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PHYSIOLOGICAL AND SUBJECTIVE EFFECTS OF HEROIN AND MORPHINE ADMINISTERED INTRAVENOUSLY IN POSTADDICTS1961
- ACTIONS AND ADDICTION LIABILITIES OF DROMORAN DERIVATIVES IN MAN1953