Abstract

The stimulatory effect of morphine on locomotor activity has been shown to be largely modified in rats that have been formerly dependent on this drug. In the present study, the relationship between the chronic dose of morphine and the degree of sensitization to the excitatory effect of opiates was investigated. To this end, four groups of rats were treated daily for 30 days with 1.25, 5, 20 and 80 mg/kg of morphine (i.p.) and challenged with morphine (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg) or fentanyl (40 and 80 μg/Kg) 1–4 months after ceasing the treatment. Drug-induced hypermotility in post-dependent rats appeared to be linearly related to the dose of the preceding chronic treatment after test doses of both morphine and fentanyl. The results are discussed in terms of a persistent dose-related modification of the neuronal mechanism subserving the excitatory component of the action of opiates; such a modification might offer a neurobiological basis for the fact that “relapse tendencies” for opiates persist for a long time after withdrawal.

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