Abstract

This study evaluated levo-alpha-acetylmethadol hydrochloride (LAAM), a long-acting morphine-like (mu) agonist approved in 1993 to treat opiate dependence. Sprague-Dawley rate (20/sex/group) were gavaged with doses of 3.0-33.5 mg kg-1 for 30 days followed by a 14-day drug-free recovery period. Treatment-related effects included dose-dependent CNS depression, decreased food consumption and body weight gain, reddish urine and abdominal staining. Tolerance developed by day 7. Mortality was dose-dependent; deaths occurred predominantly during the first week. Increased alanine aminotransferase (SGOT, AST) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), observed only in high-dose males, were associated with findings in liver. Decreases in spleen/brain weight and increases in brain/body weight ratios were seen in both sexes. Decreases in weights of heart, liver and kidney achieved statistical significance only for high-dose groups. Kidneys of mid- and high-dose groups displayed intertubular mineral/crystal deposition, focal corticomedullary mineralization and focal regenerative tubular epithelium. Centrilobular hypertrophy was observed in livers of high-dose males and mid- and high-dose females. Following the recovery period, decreased body weights and increased brain/body weight ratios occurred in mid-dose males and low-dose females. Weights of liver and kidney and organ/brain weight ratios were decreased in mid-dose males. Histopathological findings observed in kidneys and livers had abated. In summary, acute and repeated administration of LAAM produced a spectrum of activity consistent with its profile as a long-acting pure mu-agonist which stimulates microsomal enzymes in rodents. Renal and hepatic effects seen in initially drug-naive rats treated with morphine-type agonists are not observed in tolerant individuals stabilized on mu-agonists to treat opiate dependence.

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