Abstract
Low-level hyperbaric exposure antagonizes a broad range of behavioral effects of ethanol in a direct, reversible, and competitive manner. This study investigates the selectivity of the antagonism across other drugs. C57BL/6 mice were injected with saline, ethanol, n-propanol, or morphine sulfate, and then were exposed to 1 atmosphere absolute (ATA) air, 1 ATA helium-oxygen gas mixture (heliox), or 12 ATA heliox. Locomotor activity was measured from 10 to 40 min following injection. N-propanol produced a dose-dependent depression of locomotor activity from 1.0 g/kg. Morphine produced a dose-dependent stimulation of locomotor activity at doses of 3.75-12.0 mg/kg. Exposure to 12 ATA heliox significantly antagonized the locomotor depressant effects of 1.0 g/kg n-propanol and 2.5 g/kg ethanol, without significantly affecting blood concentrations of these drugs measured at 40 min postinjection. Exposure to 12 ATA heliox did not significantly antagonize the locomotor-stimulating effects of the two morphine doses tested (3.75 and 7.5 mg/kg). These findings suggest that exposure to 12 ATA heliox antagonizes the behavioral effects of intoxicant-anesthetic drugs like ethanol and n-propanol, which are believed to act via perturbation or allosteric modulation of functional proteins, but does not antagonize the effects of drugs like morphine, which act via more direct mechanisms. This demonstration of selective antagonism adds important support for the hypothesis that low-level hyperbaric exposure is a direct mechanistic ethanol antagonist, with characteristics similar to a competitive pharmacological antagonist.
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