Abstract
The interaction of sodium pentobarbital with morphine sulfate in both morphine-tolerant and non-tolerant rats was investigated using the tail-compression test for analgesia. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (300–350 g) were given pentobarbital (4, 8, or 16 mg/kg) 5 min before morphine (2, 4, 6, or 8 mg/kg). Control animals received two saline injections, or pentobarbital plus saline, or saline plus morphine. All injections were subcutaneous. Prior to the first injection, a baseline nociceptive threshold was determined for each rat by applying a modified micrometer to its tail and increasing the pressure until a squeak was elicited. Test readings were taken every half-hour for 2 hr beginning 30 min after the second injection. For the chronic studies, animals were first made tolerant to morphine by the administration of the narcotic twice a day for 3 days, increasing the dose from 10 to 50 mg/kg/injection. Identical testing procedures were then followed with these rats except that the test dose of morphine given on day 4 was in the range 8–128 mg/kg. It was found that Na pentobarbital, in the subanesthetic doses used, had neither antinociceptive nor hyperalgesic properties. Furthermore, the barbiturate had no effect on the antinociceptive action of morphine in either morphine-tolerant or non-tolerant rats.
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