Abstract
In order to evaluate the stressing role of swim hypothermia in producing swim stress-induced analgesia (SSIA), we examined whether a mere decrease in the animals’ core temperature without swimming would be sufficient to elicit analgesia. The subjects were Swiss–Webster mice selectively bred for 37 and 40 generations for divergent magnitudes of SSIA. High (HA) and low analgesia (LA) mice were exposed for 15 min to temperatures in the range between −5 and +20°C in 79% He/21% O 2 (Heliox) atmosphere. The Heliox exposure produced ambient temperature-dependent hypothermia and analgesia, as assessed with a hot-plate test (56°C). The post-Heliox analgesia was of much higher magnitude in HA than in LA mice. The steeper slope of regression of the magnitude of analgesia upon hypothermia in HA mice indicates that these mice are far more sensitive to the analgesic effect of hypothermia than LA mice. Naltrexone HCl (10 mg/kg i.p.) attenuated analgesia in ambient temperature-dependent manner in HA, but not in LA mice. In view of the apparent similarity of Heliox-induced analgesia and SSIA we suggest that hypothermia is a powerful component of swim stress to induce SSIA in the mouse.
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