Abstract

1. The effect of acute or chronic morphine treatment on the changes in arterial noradrenaline and adrenaline levels in response to sympathetic nerve stimulation was studied in rats. 2. Rats which had been chronically treated with morphine in their drinking fluid for 21 days were shown to be morphine-tolerant, as revealed by the tail-immersion test for analgesia. 3. It was found that animals given either acute or chronic morphine treatment had similar basal concentrations of arterial catecholamines to their controls. 4. Sympathetic nerve stimulation produced significant increases in arterial noradrenaline and adrenaline levels in both the control and morphine-treated animals. However, the degree of arterial noradrenaline elevation was significantly less in morphine-tolerant animals. 5. This phenomenon was not observed in acutely morphine-treated rats or at 2 weeks following opiate withdrawal in animals which had been treated previously with morphine for 3 weeks. 6. The findings suggest that chronic morphine treatment in rats not only leads to opiate tolerance but also reduces catecholamine release in response to sympathetic nerve stimulation.

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