Abstract
ABSTRACTThe United States continues to experience a public health crisis related to the nonmedical use of opioid drugs. Adolescents represent a vulnerable group due to increased experimentation with illicit substances that is often associated with the adolescent period, and because adolescent drug use can result in long-term effects that differ from those caused by drug use initiated during adulthood. The present study examined the effects of repeated heroin inhalation, a common route of administering opioids, during adolescence, on measures of nociception and anxiety-like behavior in adulthood. Rats were exposed twice daily to 30-minutes of heroin vapor from post-natal day (PND) 36 to PND 45. At 12 weeks of age, baseline thermal nociception was assessed across a range of temperatures with a warm-water tail-withdrawal assay. Anxiety-like behavior was assessed in an elevated plus-maze (EPM) and activity was measured in an open field arena. Starting at 23 weeks of age, baseline thermal nociception was re-assessed, nociception was determined after acute heroin or naloxone injection, and anxiety-like behavior was redetermined in the EPM. Adolescent heroin inhalation altered baseline thermal nociception in female rats at 12 weeks of age and in both female and male rats at ∼23 weeks. Heroin-treated animals exhibited an increase in anxiety-like behavior when tested in the elevated plus-maze, showed blunted heroin-induced analgesia, but exhibited no effect on naloxone-induced hyperalgesia. The present study demonstrates for the first time that heroin vapor inhalation during adolescence produces behavioral and physiological consequences in rats that persist well into adulthood.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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