Abstract
Abstract Guinea-pigs and mice were subjected to morphine pretreatment for at least 14 days culminating in subcutaneous injections of 1 g/kg daily in 2 divided doses. In mice, tolerance to the effects of morphine on gastrointestinal propulsion had developed by the end of the pretreatment course. The sensitivity to acetylcholine of the ilia from pretreated animals and the effects of morphine on transmural stimulation were compared with the ilia from normal animals. Ilia from pretreated guinea-pigs were marginally more sensitive to frequency of stimulation but significantly less sensitive to the depressant effect of morphine than ilia from normal animals. There was no significant difference in the sensitivity to acetylcholine. There was a highly significant decrease in sensitivity to morphine of ilia from pretreated mice, but this also was not associated with any alteration in sensitivity to acetylcholine. It is concluded that on the isolated ileum preparation the development of tolerance to morphine is not associated with an increased sensitivity to the transmitter whose release morphine inhibits.
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