Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9012771 | Life Sciences | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The ability of acute environmental or intraperitoneal (i.p.) ethanol to influence morphine antinociceptive effect was studied in mice. In order to induce tolerance to morphine analgesia, mice received daily injections of 10mg/Kg morphine over a period of 10 days. Mice were divided into three groups: i.p. ethanol (E), environmental ethanol (E*), and control saline (M). During the induction of tolerance these groups were treated identically except on days 1 and 11. On these days, 10 minutes prior to morphine injection, mice received either i.p. ethanol (1g/Kg), environmental ethanol (a bottle of 10% ethanol placed next to the animals cage during the experiments), or an equivalent volume of saline. Analgesia was assessed using a standard hot plate protocol and dose-response cumulative curves for morphine analgesia were obtained on days 1 and 11. On day 1, both the i.p. and environmental administration of ethanol showed similar morphine-potentiation effects [Mean Effective Dose: ED50 (M1) = 4.5 mg/kg; ED50 (E1) = 2.4 mg/kg; ED50 (E*1) = 2.1 mg/kg]. On day 11, control group mice showed a reduction of morphine analgesia at test [ED50 (M11) = 14.1 mg/kg]. Mice receiving i.p. and environmental ethanol again showed a leftward shift in dose-response cumulative curves for morphine antinociception with respect to controls [ED50 (E11) = 9.1 mg/kg; ED50 (E*11) = 4.7 mg/kg]. I.p. ethanol administration at non-antinociceptive doses enhances the morphine antinociception effect similarly in tolerant and non-tolerant (naive) mice. The presence of environmental ethanol can also induce a similar pattern of increase in morphine antinociception effect.
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Authors
Laura Climent Peris, Ana M. Peiró Peiró, Pedro Zapater Hernández, José Francisco Horga de la Parte,