Author:
Calvillo O.,Henry J. L.,Neuman R. S.
Abstract
Morphine and morphine-related agents were applied by microiontophoresis in the lumbar spinal cord of spinal cats to single units classified on the basis of their responses to natural cutaneous or proprioceptive stimulation. Opiate application had a current-dependent depressant effect on the ongoing activities of about one-third of the units tested. This effect was observed in laminae I and IV–VI, but only with units responding to noxious cutaneous stimuli: the nociceptive responses were themselves depressed. Excitatory and inhibitory responses to glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid, respectively, were also depressed. Intravenous administration of the opiates at doses reported to produce analgesia in the cat also depressed only units responding to noxious cutaneous stimuli, including their nociceptive responses. This depression could be reversed by either the iontophoretic application (100 nA) or the intravenous administration (0.1–0.8 mg/kg) of naloxone. These results are interpreted as further evidence that the analgesic effects of opiates are at least partly due to an action at the spinal level.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
28 articles.
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