Abstract

Studies of various strains of mice revealed marked differences in their analgesic sensitivity towards morphine (μ), U50,488H (κ 1) and naloxone benzoylhydrazone (NalBzoH; κ 3). Sensitivity to μ and κ analgesia varied independently of the other. Analgesic sensitivity to morphine remained relatively consistent among 3 different nociceptive assays for each strain. However, the sensitivity of an individual strain to NalBzoH remained highly dependent upon the assay used. CD-1 mice were sensitive to NalBzoH in all 3 assays, but in BALB/c mice NalBzoH produced analgesia only in the hot plate and cold water tail-flick assays. In Swiss-Webster mice, NalBzoH was active in the radiant heat and cold water tail-flicks but inactive in the hot plate. Although the levels of μ, κ 1 and κ 3 binding in whole brain homogenates did vary somewhat, they did not correlate with analgesic sensitivity. These results suggests that the genetic controls over μ and κ analgesia operate independently and further illustrate the many difficulties in evaluating potential analgesics.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call