Discriminative effects of morphine administered intracerabrally in the rat |
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Authors: | Harlan E Shannon Stephen G Holtzman |
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Institution: | Department of Pharmacology Emory University Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA |
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Abstract: | Rats were trained in a two-choice discrete trial avoidance paradigm to discriminate between saline and 3.0 mg/kg of morphine administered S.C. The microinjection of 0.3–3.0 μg of morphine into the lateral ventricle produced discriminative effects equivalent to those of the systemic training dose as measured by responding on the morphine-appropriate choice lever. Discriminative effects equivalent to those of the morphine training dose were not consistently produced by administration of morphine into the periaqueductal gray, lateral septum or dorsomedial thalamus in doses as high as 10 μg. However, the discriminative effects of systematically administered morphine were blocked by 10–30 μg of naloxone administered intracerebrally at all of the brain sites tested. Thus, the primary site at which morphine acts to produce discriminative effects in the rat is central, although the specific brain areas mediating these effects remain unidentified. The actions of naloxone could be the result of diffusion of the drug into the ventricular system or into the systemic circulation. |
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