Abstract

Single morphine injections induce a state of acute opioid dependence measured by an increase in naloxone potency to precipitate withdrawal. Repeated morphine exposure (daily/weekly intervals) results in further potentiation of naloxone potency, perhaps due to conditioning mechanisms. The current study tested the hypothesis that previously neutral stimuli could elicit a conditioned potentiation of the withdrawal response following acute bolus injections of morphine. Rats trained on an FR-15 schedule for food received five morphine injections (5.6 mg/kg) at daily intervals. Four hr after morphine injection on Conditioning Days (first 4 days), naloxone (1 mg/kg)-induced suppression of responding was paired either with operant context only, or with a tone/light conditioned stimulus (CS). On Test Day low dose naloxone (0.001–0.33 mg/kg) given 4-h post-morphine preceded the operant session. Rats exposed to naloxone repeatedly in the operant context without CS (Paired-Context Only) showed an increase in naloxone potency on Test Day relative to Unpaired Controls that received all morphine and naloxone in the home cage at a different time of day than operant testing. Rats exposed to the tone/light CS on Conditioning Days also showed a significant increase in naloxone potency relative to Unpaired Controls when the CS was represented on Test Day (Paired-CS), but not when the CS was omitted on the Test Day (Paired-CS/Test Context). Thus, conditioning processes appear to play a significant role in the early development of opioid dependence and withdrawal.

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