Abstract
The effects of morphine sulfate (10, 15 and 20 mg/kg) or saline control (5 mg/kg) on the latency of the anterior body-lifting response to heat (avoidance response) were determined in four groups of snails Megalobulimus sanctipauli ( n = 6) individually placed on a metal plate mounted on the surface of a water bath at 52 ± 1°C. The effects of pre-treatment with naloxone hydrochloride (5 mg/kg) or saline (2.5 ml/kg) control on the responses to morphine (15 mg/kg) were determined in two different groups of animals ( n = 6). Administration of morphine resulted in an increase in the avoidance behavior latency with maximum effects occuring at 15 mg/kg, 10–15 min after injection. The effects of morphine disappeared within 90–120 min. Saline treatment had no detectable effects on the latency of the response to an aversive stimulus. Naloxone significantly blocked ( P < 0.05, Student paired t-test) the increase in avoidance behavior latency. The present results indicate that: 1. morphine has an antinociceptive effect on the response of Megalobulimus sanctipauli to an aversive thermal stimulus; and 2. the morphine-induced “analgesia” may be caused by the stimulation of μ opiate receptors.
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More From: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. Part C: Comparative Pharmacology and Toxicology
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