Abstract

Short-term tolerance to morphine, which can be demonstrated in as little as 3 hours after a single administration of the opiate, was examined in animals chronically pretreated with diazepam, phenobarbital, or amphetamine. Tail-flick latency in mice and changes in plasma corticosterone in rats were the parameters tested in these experiments. Rats primed with either saline or morphine, 10 mg/kg, were injected 3 hours subsequently with morphine, 5 mg/kg. Those primed with saline showed the characteristic plasma corticosterone elevation following morphine, when serial blood samples were examined, whereas those previously treated with morphine did not. Mice were primed with saline or either of two doses of morphine, 30 or 100 mg/kg, 3.5 hours prior to estimation of tail-flick latency and ED50 determinations. Mice primed with either dose of morphine had significantly higher ED50's than those primed with saline. Chronic treatment with diazepam or amphetamine in either species did not significantly alter short-term tolerance development by either parameter. However, with phenobarbital pretreatment, the plasma corticosterone response was attenuated and short-term tolerance to morphine's analgesic effects did not occur. Further studies in morphine-pelleted mice showed that analgesic tolerance occurred similarly in all groups. This suggests that barbiturates may delay the process.

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