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1.
L.J. King  K.H. Minnema  C. Cash 《Life sciences》1977,21(10):1465-1473
Morphine sulphate (4 mg/kg to 32 mg/kg) produced a dose-dependent decrease in brain malate as antinociception increased. Decreased brain malate persisted 72 hours after implantation of morphine pellets by which time mice had become tolerant to antinociception. This finding suggests that malate decrease, unlike changes of other metabolites in other studies, might not be simply a result of general metabolic changes. Malate change as well as antinociception was prevented by prior injection of naloxone (3.0 mg/kg) or naltrexone (0.6 mg/kg) in acute experiments. Malate decrease in pelleted mice was no longer present if withdrawal was produced by naloxone or naltrexone in mice implanted with morphine pellets for 72 hours. Brain P-creatine was elevated in all mice implanted with morphine pellets even after withdrawal, thus, apparently, representing a more generalized effect than malate change.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrous oxide-induced hypothermia in the rat   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Exposure of rats to high levels of nitrous oxide (N2O) in oxygen (O2) reduced body temperature in a concentration-related manner. The hypothermia was partly reversed by pretreatment with naloxone but not naltrexone. But in rats rendered tolerant to morphine by pellet implantation, exposure to 75% N2O/25% O2 evoked a marked hypothermia similar to that observed in morphine-naive animals. In another experiment, the hypothermic effect of chloral hydrate was also sensitive to antagonism by pretreatment with naloxone but not naltrexone. These observations lead us to suspect that N2O-induced hypothermia in rats is possibly not mediated by opiate receptors. The thermotropic activity of N2O may result from some non-opioid action of N2O. Its selective antagonism by naloxone (but not naltrexone) may be due to a unique non-opioid analeptic action of naloxone.  相似文献   

3.
Although a central site of acute opiate action in regulating luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion has been suggested by the ability of centrally implanted opiate antagonists to increase LH levels, opiate antagonists are lipophilic and could influence the pituitary in situ. Also, the physiological significance of opiate receptor blockade with antagonists rests on the assumed, but untested, stereoselectivity of these receptors. Therefore, a lipophobic quaternized derivative of naltrexone (MRZ 2663-Naltrexone methobromide) and dextro- (+) and levo- (-) stereoisomers of naloxone were used to study the site- and stereoselectivity of gonadotropin responses to opiate antagonists in vivo. Male rats were injected intracerebroventricularly (icv) or intravenously (iv) with the quaternary or tertiary congeners of naltrexone and subcutaneously (sc) with (-) or (+)-naloxone. Rats injected icv with 20 ug of quaternary naltrexone displayed significant increases in serum luteinizing hormone (LH). The onset of the response was rapid with serum LH levels being significantly elevated 15 minutes after the injection and returning to basal levels 30 minutes later. Rats injected iv with 10 mg/kg of quaternary naltrexone failed to show significant LH responses. Rats injected either centrally or periphally with equivalent doses of tertiary naltrexone showed LH responses that were similar to those found in animals injected icv with quaternary naltrexone. As little as 0.5 mg/kg of (-)-naloxone resulted in significant elevations in serum LH that were higher than those elicited by up to 10 mg/kg of (+)-naloxone, indicating that this effect of naloxone is stereoselective. These data support the argument that opioids can acutely modulate LH secretion through actions at stereoselective opioid receptors in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

4.
Systemically administered beta-endorphin was tested in rats for its ability to modify the hypothermia and hypermotility induced by d-amphetamine. Colonic temperature and motor activity were measured in a cold (4°C) ambient temperature in animals given IP injections of beta-endorphin (0.1, 1.0, or 3.0 mg/kg), naloxone (10 mg/kg), or morphine (30 mg/kg). The same measurements were taken in animals given beta-endorphin (1.0 mg/kg) in combination with naloxone or saline pretreatment and d-amphetamine (15 mg/kg) or saline post-treatment. Morphine alone had a biphasic effect on thermoregulation, but did not affect d-amphetamine-induced hypothermia. Activity scores were decreased by morphine, in both d-amphetamine and saline treated animals. The thermal response of rats to beta-endorphin alone was variable, depending on dosage, but all 3 dosages partially blocked the hypothermic effect of d-amphetamine. Naloxone blocked the thermal effects of both beta-endorphin and d-amphetamine. Motor activity tended to be decreased by naloxone, regardless of amphetamine treatment, but beta-endorphin tended to increase activity in amphetamine-treated animals and reduce it in saline-treated controls. In their actions on both thermoregulation and activity, naloxone and beta-endorphin appeared to interact independently with d-amphetamine, often producing effects in the same direction, but in combination, they tended to be mutually inhibitory.  相似文献   

5.
A Horita  M A Carino 《Life sciences》1978,23(16):1681-1686
Naloxone (5 mg/kg), but not naltrexone, shortened the duration of anaesthesia in rabbits pretreated with pentobarbital. This analeptic effect was blocked by atropine, but not by methylatropine; it thus appears that a central cholinergic mechanism is involved. In contrast, smaller doses of both naloxone and naltrexone attenuated the arousal property of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH). Naloxone, but not naltrexone, also antagonized the analeptic property of d-amphetamine. In conscious animals naloxone potentiated, whereas naltrexone attenuated, the excitatory effects of TRH and d-amphetamine.  相似文献   

6.
Heart rate (HR) and mean arterial blood pressure (BP) were recorded from conscious, chair-restrained squirrel monkeys surgically prepared with chronically indwelling arterial and venous catheters to determine the effects of acute intravenous injections of two opiate antagonists and an agonist. Naloxone (0.3–10.0 mg/kg) or naltrexone (0.3–10.0 mg/kg) had little effect on HR or BP during a 30-minute post-injection period. Morphine (3.0–5.6 mg/kg) produced biphasic effects comprising an initial decrease followed by an increase in HR, and an increase followed by a decrease in BP. Lower morphine doses had lesser effects during a 100-minute post-injection period. Pre-treatment with 0.03 mg/kg naloxone attenuated the depressive effect of morphine on HR and BP, but increases in HR and BP due to morphine were enhanced. Pretreatment with 0.3 mg/kg naloxone prevented morphine-induced decreases in HR and BP, yet increases in HR and BP persisted. In previous behavioral studies, morphine in combination with naloxone similarly increased rates of responding in the squirrel monkey. Together, these data suggest an effect of naloxone that goes beyond mere pharmacological antagonism of the effects of morphine.  相似文献   

7.
The sexual receptive and proceptive behaviors induced by opiate antagonists, naloxone and naltrexone in estrogen-primed ovariectomized rats were observed under the presence of sexually active males. The females were treated intraperitoneally with naloxone or naltrexone at doses ranging from 0.5 to 4.0 mg/kg and the sexual behavior of females was tested before and after the injection of drug. The results obtained suggest that the opiate antagonists play a role in the regulation of lordosis behavior, but not proceptive behavior in female rats.  相似文献   

8.
The discriminative effects of cyclorphan were studied in pigeons trained to discriminate 0.32 mg/kg ethylketazocine, 1.8 mg/kg cyclazocine, or 32 mg/kg naltrexone from saline. A fourth group of pigeons was administered 100 mg/kg/day morphine and trained to discriminate 0.1 mg/kg naltrexone from saline. Cyclorphan produced dose-related ethylketazocine-appropriate responding that reached a maximum of 83% of the total session responses at 0.3 mg/kg. Higher cyclorphan doses produced less ethylketazocine-appropriate responding. In pigeons trained to discriminate cyclazocine from saline, maximum drug-appropriate responding of greater than 90% occured at 5.6–10.0 mg/kg cyclorphan. In narcotic-naive pigeons trained to discriminate 32 mg/kg naltrexone from saline, cyclorphan produced a maximum of less than 50% drug-appropriate responding. In contrast, in pigeons chronically administered morphine and trained to discriminate 0.1 mg/kg naltrexone from saline, 1.0 mg/kg cyclorphan resulted in 100% drug-appropriate responding. In pigeons responding under a multiple fixed-interval, fixed-ratio schedule of food delivery, cyclorphan produced a complete dose-related reversal of the rate-decreasing effects of 10 mg/kg morphine, the maximally effective antagonist doses being 1.0–3.2 mg/kg. Higher cyclorphan doses (10 mg/kg) resulted in response rate decreases that were not reversed by naloxone (1 mg/kg). Thus, cyclorphan has discriminative effects that are similar to those of both ethylketazocine and, at 20-fold higher doses, cyclazocine. In addition, in morphine-treated pigeons, cyclorphan, across the same range of doses that produce ethylketazocine-appropriate responding, has discriminative effects that are similar to those of naltrexone, an effect that is probably related to the antagonist action of the drug.  相似文献   

9.
Reserpine (1 mg/kg, i.p.) induced catalepsy and blepharoptosis in mice which were readily reversed by the administration of L-dopa (300 mg/kg, i.p.). The administration of the pure narcotic antagonists naloxone (10 mg/kg, i.p.) and naltrexone (1 mg/kg, i.p.) significantly potentiated L-dopa reversal of reserpine-induced catalepsy. Lower doses of the narcotic antagonists did not significantly alter this reversal. The L-dopa reversal of blepharoptosis was not significantly altered by either naloxone or naltrexone. These results indicate that while opiate receptors may be involved in L-dopa reversal of catalepsy, they may not have a role in the alteration of blepharoptosis.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of buprenorphine pretreatment on the acute cocaine toxicity was assessed in male Swiss Webster mice. Buprenorphine pretreatment (0.15 or 0.30 mg/kg ip, 30 mins before) significantly attenuated the lethal effects of cocaine (60-140 mg/kg ip). The dose of cocaine which resulted in 50% mortality (LD50) in saline pretreated group was 100.61 mg/kg while the LD50 of cocaine in buprenorphine (0.15 and 0.3 mg/kg) pretreated groups were 113.57 and 118.16 mg/kg respectively. There was no significant change in the ratio of brain/plasma levels of cocaine in buprenorphine pretreated group when compared to the ratio from saline treated controls. Furthermore, neither naloxone (10 mg/kg ip, 15 mins before) nor naltrexone (3 mg/kg ip, 15 mins before) pretreatment affected the LD50 of cocaine. When tested 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8 and 24 hrs after cocaine administration, sublethal dose of cocaine (80 mg/kg ip) injection resulted in significant increase in the plasma lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels. Buprenorphine pretreatment significantly attenuated cocaine-induced release of LDH. These results suggest that buprenorphine could be of potential advantage over naloxone in the management of cocaine and heroin ("speed ball") toxicity and in studies on the pharmacotherapy of cocaine-induced toxicity, LDH levels may be used as a biochemical marker to assess the protective effects of drugs.  相似文献   

11.
In this study we have examined the interactions of bombesin (1 microgram ICV), neurotensin (1 microgram ICV), TRH (10 micrograms ICV), somatostatin (10 micrograms ICV), PGE2 (10 micrograms ICV) and naloxone (10 mg/kg SC) on thermoregulation in the rat at room temperature (20 +/- 1 degree C). Given alone, bombesin, neurotensin, somatostatin and naloxone all produced hypothermia (bombesin greater than neurotensin greater than somatostatin congruent to naloxone). PGE2 was hyperthermic, and TRH had no effect. Bombesin and PGE2 neutralized one another's effects. Neurotensin had no effect on PGE2-induced hyperthermia. Naloxone enhanced the hypothermic effect of bombesin and somatostatin enhanced the rate of onset of hypothermia after bombesin. TRH had no effect on bombesin-induced hypothermia. TRH, somatostatin and naloxone had no effect on neurotensin-induced hypothermia. TRH antagonized the hypothermia due to naloxone and somatostatin.  相似文献   

12.
The numerous studies of opioids as discriminative stimuli, beginning in 1971, have shown specificity, similarity of several opioids, differences in potency (fentanyl greater than heroin greater methadone greater than morphine), and antagonism by naloxone and naltrexone. The discriminative opioid stimulus is differentiated from those of other classes of drugs, such as sedatives and anxiolytics. Greater potency of the opioid stimulus has been found in rats after subcutaneous (s.c.) than intraperitoneal administration. The discriminative opioid stimulus and its antagonism by naloxone or naltrexone have been demonstrated in rats, squirrel monkeys, gerbils, and pigeons. A few studies have quantified the competitive agonist-antagonist interaction at the receptor by calculating the pA2, which reflects the dose of the antagonist that requires doubling the agonist dose to obtain the original agonist response. The pA2 for naloxone is the same in groups of rats trained to discriminate different doses of morphine (1, 2, or 4 mg/kg s.c.) from saline. Higher pA2 values in tests after fentanyl and methadone than after heroin and morphine in rats trained to discriminate fentanyl (0.04 mg/kg s.c.) from saline reflect greater susceptibility of the synthetic than the natural exogenous opioids to antagonism by naloxone. Different pA2 values are usually interpreted as indicating differences among populations of receptors.  相似文献   

13.
C A Paronis  S G Holtzman 《Life sciences》1992,50(19):1407-1416
Chronic opioid antagonist administration increases opioid binding sites and potentiates behavioral responses to morphine. Conversely, chronic opioid agonist administration attenuates behavioral responses to morphine, though this is not necessarily accompanied by a parallel loss of binding sites. We examined the possibility that the in vivo affinity of the mu receptors might be altered as a consequence of the continuous administration of either naloxone or morphine. Rats were implanted sc with naloxone- or morphine-filled osmotic pumps; control animals were implanted with sham pumps. One week later, 24 hr after removing the osmotic pumps, cumulative dose-response curves for fentanyl analgesia were generated in the presence of 0.0, 0.03, 0.1, or 0.3 mg/kg naltrexone, using a tail-flick procedure. The analgesic ED50 (with 95% C. L.) of fentanyl in sham implanted animals, following saline pretreatment was 0.027 mg/kg (0.019, 0.039). The potency of fentanyl was decreased in rats infused with morphine, ED50 = 0.051 mg/kg (0.028, 0.093), and increased in rats that received naloxone, ED50 = 0.018 mg/kg (0.015, 0.022). The mean apparent pA2 value for naltrexone (with 95% C.L.) in the control group was 7.7 (7.5, 7.9). No differences were detected in animals that had received either naloxone or morphine for 7 days, pA2 = 7.8 (7.5, 8.1) and 7.4 (7.3, 7.6), respectively. Our results indicate that there is no change in the apparent affinity of the mu-receptor following continuous exposure to either an opioid agonist or antagonist, at a time when the analgesic potency of the agonist is decreased or increased, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of kyotorphin (L-Tyr-L-Arg) and cyclo (N-methyl-L-Tyr-L-Arg), its analog, produced significant dose-dependent hypothermic responses in mice at an ambient temperature of 24°C. The hypothermic action of kyotorphin was much greater than that of Met-enkephalin (Met-ENK) but less than that of cyclo NMTA. This action was slightly but not significantly reversed by intraperitoneally administered naloxone (8 mg/kg), an opioid receptor antagonist. Met-ENK utilized as a control peptide in this study also produced a dose-dependent hypothermia which was slightly antagonized by naloxone (8 mg/kg, IP). Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) injected ICV produced hyperthermia dose-dependently. The hypothermia induced by kyotorphin, its cyclic analog and Met-ENK was prevented by a small dose of TRH (0.18 μg=0.5 nmol/animal) which by itself had little effect on body temperature. A TRH neuronal system in the brain may explain the mechanism of kyotorphin-induced hypothermia. However, there was little evidence of involvement of opioid receptors. The present study demonstrates a potent action of kyotorphin and its analog on thermoregulation.  相似文献   

15.
Single doses of naloxone (0.025 to 0.5 mg/kg) or of one of four quaternary narcotic antagonists (i.e. nalorphine allobromide, nalorphine methobromide, naloxone methobromide or naltrexone methobromide, 1 to 60 mg/kg) were given s.c. to rats before morphine, 5 mg/kg i.v. In the absence of antagonists morphine reduced G.I. transit of a charcoal meal to about 15% of drug-free controls and consistently delayed nociceptive reactions (55°C hot plate) in all animals. Doses of antagonists slightly reducing morphine antinociception (centrally effective = A) and restoring G.I. transit to about 50% of drug-free rats (peripherally effective = B) were estimated. The A:B ratio, indicating peripheral selectivity, was at least 8 for any of the quaternary antagonists given 10 min before morphine, but prolonging this interval may have resulted in a lower figure (i.e. less peripheral selectivity) because of reduced A and increased B. This was definitely so for naltrexone methobromide (A:B, > 60 at 10 min, about 1 at 80 min) and was not apparent for nalorphine methobromide according to available data, which for nalorphine allobromide and to a lesser extent for naloxone methobromide showed only an increase in B at intervals longer than 10 min. Both morphine-induced antinociception and inhibition of G.I. transit were reduced by naloxone at the lower doses tested and were fully prevented at the higher. These findings indicate that, unlike naloxone, the investigated quaternary narcotic antagonists are interesting prototype drugs for selective blockade of opiate receptors outside the CNS, although certain critical aspects, possibly biological N-dealkylation to the corresponding tertiary antagonists, condition peripheral selectivity.  相似文献   

16.
This experiment tested the hypothesis that opioid antagonists could influence the timing of the onset and progress of parturition in the pig. Primiparous pigs (gilts) received a jugular catheter on Days 104 to 106 of pregnancy. At 1400 h on Day 112 the gilts received 10 mg PGF2alpha, i.m. to induce parturition. At 1000 h on Day 113 (i.e., 20 h later) gilts received either saline (n=6), 1 mg/kg, i.v. naltrexone (n=4) or 1 mg/kg, i.v. naloxone (n=5). Blood samples were taken daily from Days 108 to 116. On Day 113, blood samples were taken hourly from 0500 to 0900 h and then every 30 min until 2400 h, or until the birth of the last piglet (BLP) (whichever was sooner) and assayed for progesterone, oxytocin (OT), cortisol and PRL. Additional blood samples for OT and cortisol assay were taken every minute from 0930 to 1100 h on Day 113 and for 30 min during parturition. Naloxone, but not naltrexone, delayed the onset of parturition relative to saline controls (by 14 h 21 min; P<0.05). Duration of parturition and rate of births were not significantly affected by treatment. Mean plasma OT increased in the 4 h following naloxone but not saline treatment, during which time OT plasma pulse amplitude was reduced in naloxone and naltrexone-treated animals relative to saline treated controls. The PRL secretion rose following treatment in saline treated animals, consistent with approaching parturition, but failed to rise in opioid antagonist treated animals. Progesterone concentrations remained elevated in naloxone-treated animals for longer than in the other groups. These data suggest that a rapid change in overall effect of parenteral administration of naloxone to parturient pigs occurs from delaying its onset when administered as in these experiments, to facilitating its progress when given during parturition (earlier experiments). The delay of onset of parturition may be mediated by interference with hypothalamic control of OT or PRL release.  相似文献   

17.
Pure narcotic antagonists such as naloxone and naltrexone have consistently been shown to attenuate drinking in the rat after periods of water deprivation. One objective of this study was to extend observations to a primate species, the squirrel monkey. Whereas naloxone and naltrexone have a greater relative affinity for opiate receptors preferentially binding morphine and other opiate alkaloids than for those with high affinity for the endogenous opioid peptides, diprenorphine, another pure opiate antagonist, binds with equally high affinity to both receptor subtypes. Therefore, a second objective was to determine the actions of diprenorphine on drinking in water-deprived rats and squirrel monkeys and to compare the effects of this drug to those of naloxone and naltrexone. All three narcotic antagonists suppressed water consumption of monkeys and rats deprived of water for 18 and 24 hr, respectively. Diprenorphine was the most potent compound tested in both species, producing significant reductions in water consumption of monkeys and rats at systemic doses as low as 0.01 and 0.1 mg/kg respectively. Moreover, diprenorphine was the longest acting of the three drugs in the monkey. These results demonstrate that the narcotic antagonists attenuate drinking in primates as well as in rodents and support the hypothesis that these drugs reduce water intake by interrupting the activity of endogenous opioid pathways mediating drinking behavior.  相似文献   

18.
E D French  S A Vasquez  R George 《Life sciences》1978,22(21):1947-1954
Morphine in doses of 1, 2, and 4 mg/kg i.v. produced dose related elevations in cat body temperature while doses of 0.25 and 0.50 mg/kg had no such effect. Tolerance was found to develop to the hyperthermic response after seven days of daily morphine injection. Pretreatment with naloxone at a dose one-fourth the dose of morphine prevented the morphine induced rise in body temperature in all cats tested. When the cats received naloxone after twelve days of daily morphine a withdrawal syndrome resulted and was accompanied by a hypothermia that was proportional to the morphine maintenance dose and severity of withdrawal.  相似文献   

19.
L.H. Fossom  S.B. Sparber 《Life sciences》1982,31(25):2827-2835
Rats were trained to perform a fixed ratio-15 operant for food reinforcement during a 30 minute daily session. Naltrexone, in doses up to 45 mg/kg administered 15 min before the behavioral session, failed to disrupt responding. However, 0.3 and 1.0 mg naltrexone/kg produced a dose related potentiation of the operant behavioral suppression induced by 1.0 mg d-amphetamine/kg injected immediately before the session. The naltrexone/d-amphetamine combination also produced excessive salivation and postural abnormalities not seen when either drug was administered alone. [A subsequent study indicated that the salivation induced by naltrexone in combination with d-amphetamine may require previous exposure to naltrexone and/or d-amphetamine.] Blockade of dopamine receptors with pimozide did not modify the interaction. Functional noradrenergic blockade with a low dose of clonidine significantly reversed the potentiated suppression, of operant behavior, as well as the excessive salivation and abnormal posture. These data suggest that there is an important noradrenergic component to the interaction of naltrexone with d-amphetamine. The impressive interaction of behaviorally inactive doses of naltrexone with a moderate dose of d-amphetamine reported here for rats may have clinical implications for detoxified opiate addicts maintained on naltrexone in antagonist therapy programs.  相似文献   

20.
Naltrexone, an opiate antagonist, was administered to young obese (ob/ob) and lean mice for five weeks. Animals had continuous access to food and received 10 mg/kg SC twice daily with equivalent volumes of saline given to controls. The effects on body weight, and pituitary and plasma levels of β-endorphin-like material were measured. Naltrexone-injected obese animals gained weight more slowly over the first three weeks while the weight gain of lean animals was not affected by naltrexone. Plasma levels of β-endorphin were shown to be significantly higher in untreated ob/ob mice and this difference increased with age (4–20 weeks). With naltrexone treatment, plasma levels in +/? mice rose and exceeded those in ob/ob. Saline treatment appeared to be a stress, and pituitary β-endorphins rose 4–6 fold in ob/ob compared with +/?. While naltrexone reduced the levels in ob/ob pituitary towards normal, no effect on β-endorphin levels in pituitary of lean mice was obtained. In vitro studies of effects of the opiate antagonists, naloxone, on insulin secretion by isolated islets provided additional evidence of resistance of lean mice to naloxone relative to ob/ob. (IRI secretion fell only in naloxone treated ob/ob islets.) These observations support the contention that this form of genetic obesity is characterized by elevated endogenous opiate levels and an increased sensitivity to opiate antagonists such as naltrexone or naloxone.  相似文献   

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