Abstract

Effects of estrous cycle and acute and chronic access to palatable fluids on tail-flick latency and opiate-induced analgesia were assessed in 124 female Long Evans rats. Following three consistent cycles, rats were water deprived for 8 h and then given ad lib access to 20 ml of either water, a 32% sucrose solution, or corn oil for 5 h. Nociceptive testing was conducted immediately preceding and 30, 60, and 90 min following an SC injection of morphine sulfate (7.5 mg/kg). Diestrus rats had prolonged premorphine tail-flick latencies compared to rats in proestrus. Rats that consumed corn oil had longer tail-flick latencies preceding and 30 min following morphine injections than rats that drank water or the sucrose solution. Rats were tested after they had ad lib access to the same fluid for 3 weeks. No estrous cycle differences were noted following chronic consumption. Rats with chronic access to sucrose showed increased baseline pain sensitivity and increased morphine-induced analgesia at 30, 60, and 90 min postinjection. These data support the notion that palatable fluid consumption attenuates estrous cycle-dependent differences in pain sensitivity.

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