Abstract

Mice were rendered dependent on morphine by mixing morphine with their food (2 mg/g) for three days. Increasing doses of naloxone precipitated dose-dependent withdrawal reactions such as weight loss and jumping. These withdrawal reactions were antagonized by morphine pretreatment. Effects of morphine, such as increased locomotor activity, inhibition of intestinal transport, and analgesia were antagonized by naloxone in both non-dependent and dependent subjects. The antagonist actions of naloxone were increased in dependent subjects; lower doses of naloxone were sufficient to antagonize effects of morphine. The present results confirm earlier studies indicating that precipitation of withdrawal can be antagonized by morphine pretreatment suggesting that withdrawal reactions are due to actions of naloxone at the same receptor at which opioid agonists act. The increased antagonist potency of naloxone in dependent subjects extends earlier results obtained with analgesic effects to several other agonist effects of morphine and is consistent with the interpretation that exposure to an opioid agonist induces a change in the conformation of opioid receptors.

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