Affiliation:
1. Department of Normal, Pathological and Clinical Physiology, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
Abstract
Prenatal exposure to methamphetamine (METH) increases nociceptive sensitivity in adult rats. As the strong analgesics have high abuse potential and drugs of abuse are known to have analgesic properties, the aim was to study analgesic effect of different psychostimulants in control and prenatally METH-exposed rats. Latencies of withdrawal reflexes of hind limbs and the tail on thermal nociceptive stimuli were repeatedly measured in 15-min intervals after the application of 5 mg/kg s.c. of amphetamine (AMPH), methamphetamine (METH), cocaine (COC), 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) or morphine (MOR). In all groups, AMPH induced on hind limbs stronger analgesia than METH and MDMA whereas COC and MOR were practically without any effect. On the tail, effect of AMPH did not differ from that of MOR. All psychostimulants increased defecation in comparison with MOR and in all groups the number of defecation boluses positively correlated with analgesia of the hind limbs. We did not confirm that prenatal exposure to METH makes adult rats more sensitive either to same drug or to other psychostimulants. The different analgesic potencies of psychostimulants and MOR at different body sites indicate the possible existence of a somatotopic organization of pain inhibition, which is controlled by different mechanisms.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Reference42 articles.
1. ALTIER N, STEWART J: The role of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens in analgesia. Life Sci 65: 2269-2287, 1999.
2. BANDLER R, SHIPLEY MT: Columnar organization in the midbrain periaqueductal gray: modules for emotional expression? Trends Neurosci 17: 379-389, 1994.
3. BANKSON MG, CUNNINGHAM KA: 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) as a unique model of serotonin receptor function and serotonin-dopamine interactions. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 297: 846-852, 2001.
4. BECERRA L, BREITER HC, WISE R, GONZALEZ RG, BORSOOK D: Reward circuitry activation by noxious thermal stimuli. Neuron 32: 927-946, 2001.
5. BORSOOK D, BECERRA L, CARLEZON WA Jr, SHAW M, RENSHAW P, ELMAN I, LEVINE J: Reward-aversion circuitry in analgesia and pain: implications for psychiatric disorders. Eur J Pain 11: 7-20, 2007.
Cited by
11 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献