Abstract: | Electrical stimulation of rat habenular complex induces analgesia, evaluated by the tail-flick test, dependent on intensity of stimulation with a long post-effect, that is reversible by naloxone and without behavior effects at less that 400 mA. Bilateral destruction of habenula fails to provoke hyperesthesia but causes more marked long-term tolerance effects than in controls. Anatomy suggests that the habenula activates an inhibitory descending system in the spinal cord with a probable relay in the dorsal raphe and involving an endogenous opioid-dependent stage. |