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Stress-opioid interactions: a comparison of morphine and methadone
Authors:Ewa Taracha  Paweł Mierzejewski  Małgorzata Lehner  Stanisław J. Chrapusta  Maria Kała  Wojciech Lechowicz  Adam Hamed  Anna Skórzewska  Wojciech Kostowski  Adam Płaźnik
Affiliation:1. Department of Neurochemistry, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Sobieskiego 9, PL 02-957 Warszawa, Poland;2. Department of Pharmacology and Physiology of the Nervous System, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Sobieskiego 9, PL 02-957 Warszawa, Poland;3. Department of Experimental Pharmacology, Mossakowski Medical Research Center, Polish Academy of Sciences, Pawiñskiego 5, PL 02-106 Warszawa, Poland;4. Institute of Forensic Research, Westerplatte 9, PL 31-033 Kraków, Poland;5. Department of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Warsaw, Krakowskie Przedmieoecie 26/28, PL 00-927 Warszawa, Poland
Abstract:The utility of methadone and morphine for analgesia and of methadone for substitution therapy for heroin addiction is a consequence of these drugs acting as opioid receptor agonists.We compared the cataleptogenic and antinociceptive effects of single subcutaneous doses of methadone hydrochloride (1–4 mg/kg) and morphine sulfate (2.5–10 mg/kg) using catalepsy and hot-plate tests, and examined the effects of the highest doses of the drugs on Fos protein expression in selected brain regions in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Methadone had greater cataleptogenic and analgesic potency than morphine. Fos immunohistochemistry revealed substantial effects on the Fos response of both the stress induced by the experimental procedures and of the drug exposure itself. There were three response patterns identified: 1) drug exposure, but not stress, significantly elevated Fos-positive cell counts in the caudate-putamen; 2) stress alone and stress combined with drug exposure similarly elevated Fos-positive cell counts in the nucleus accumbens and cingulate cortex; and 3) methadone and morphine (to a lesser extent) counteracted the stimulatory effect of nonpharmacological stressors on Fos protein expression in the somatosensory cortex barrel field, and Fos-positive cell counts in this region correlated negatively with both the duration of catalepsy and the latency time in the hot-plate test. The overlap between brain regions reacting to nonpharmacological stressors and those responding to exogenous opioids suggests that stress contributes to opioid-induced neuronal activation.
Keywords:opioid  stress  Fos protein  striatum  nucleus accumbens  cortex  catalepsy  pain
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