Abstract

Acute systematic administration of narcotic analgesics increases the firing rate of nerve cells in the zona compacta of the substantia nigra, causes an increase in the rate of dopamine turnover in striatal and mesolimbic areas of the brain, stimulates prolactin release, inhibits brain self-stimulation and discriminated shock-avoidance, blocks cardiovascular effects of systemically injected dopamine, blocks aggression as well as compulsive jumping in mice treated with DOPA and amphetamine, antagonizes stereotypy induced by apomorphine or amphetamine, and blocks apomorphine-induced vomiting in dogs. Chronic administration of narcotic analgesics results in withdrawal signs upon the cessation of the drug administration. These signs include, tolerance to the increase in striatal dopamine turnover caused by narcotic analgesics or haloperidol, aggressive behaviors which are further stimulated by directly or indirectly acting dopamine-receptor agonists and are blocked by dopamine-receptor blockers, facilitation of recovery from the “lateral hypothalamic syndrome”, an increase in basal levels of striatal adenylate cyclase which shows greater sensitivity to dopamine, and, an enhanced sensitivity to apomorphine-induced reduction of dopamine turnover. It is therefore, concluded that acute administration of narcotic drugs results in an inhibition of dopamine-receptor activity while chronic administration of these drugs results in an increased response of these dopamine receptors to dopamine agonists. Recent experiments on the interaction of other drugs with narcotic analgesics suggest that, unlike the direct action of neuroleptics on the dopamine receptors, the narcotic action on dopamine receptors is indirect.

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