Abstract

Chronic treatment of mice with clonidine or morphine caused tolerance to the analgesic and thermoregulatory effects of these drugs. After chronic morphine, mice also became tolerant to the analgesic and thermoregulatory effects of clonidine. Cross tolerance to the hypothermic effect of morphine was demonstrated after chronic clonidine administration, but no diminution of morphine-induced analgesia could be shown. Morphine and clonidine acutely increased the retention of sulfobromophthalein (BSP) in plasma and liver. Chronic dosing with morphine or clonidine caused partial tolerance and cross-tolerance to the rise in hepatic BSP caused by an acute challenge with either agonist. However, both drugs elevated plasma BSP levels similarly in tolerant and non-tolerant mice. Thus, regimens which readily induced tolerance to the analgesic and hypothermic effects of morphine or clonidine were only partially effective in modifying the acute hepatobiliary effects of these drugs.

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