Abstract

We evaluated the effects of systemic administration of a low dose of naloxone in rats with bilateral lesions in the area of the locus coeruleus (LC) under conditions of unilateral inflammation, compared with those in sham-operated rats. In each group, rats received a single s.c. injection of carrageenan (6 mg in 0.15 ml saline), and effects of a low dose of naloxone (5 microg/kg, i.p.) on thermal nociception were examined at 4 h and 7 days following the induction of unilateral hindpaw inflammation. The antinociceptive effect was assessed by prolongation of the paw withdrawal latency (PWL) to noxious thermal stimuli. Prior to induction of inflammation, the low dose of naloxone had no significant effect on PWLs in either the sham-operated or the LC-lesioned rats. Four hours after carrageenan injection, the low dose of naloxone produced prolongation of PWLs in the sham-operated rats but failed to induce antinociception in the LC-lesioned rats. Antinociceptive effects were observed in both groups of rats 7 days after carrageenan injection. These results suggest that the LC is involved in naloxone-induced anti-nociception during the early phase of inflammation.

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