Abstract

The influence of morphine, d-Ala 2, Met 5-enkephalinamide (DALA), and naloxone on plasma cortisol titres has been studied in vivo in fingerling and adult trout. The responses were complex and variable. A single ip injection of morphine or DALA into fingerlings usually resulted in a rise in plasma cortisol after 0.5 hr followed by a fall below control values within 2 hr. In similar experiments with adult trout, only an inhibitory effect was observed. Naloxone reduced the rise in plasma cortisol following saline injection, but only when the hypothalamo-pituitary-interrenal response was intense. The antagonist also blocked the morphine-induced rise in cortisol secretion. Prolonged morphine treatment diminished both the postinjection and stress-induced secretion of cortisol in adult fish. Morphine had no effect on the spontaneous or ACTH-induced secretion of cortisol by interrenal tissue incubated in vitro. The results support the concept of inhibitory and stimulatory sites of action by opiates and opioid substances on the hypothalamo-pituitary-interrenal axis. These findings are discussed with reference to the action of morphine on hypothalamic and pituitary tissue of the trout in vitro and with the opioid control of hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal function in mammals.

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