Restraint alters the thermic response to morphine by postural interference |
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Authors: | J.N. McDougal P.R. Marques T.F. Burks |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, Tucson, AZ 85724, USA |
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Abstract: | The effects of morphine on body temperature have been shown to be altered by restraint. The purpose of this study was to determine how the type of restraint alters body temperature measurements and whether restraint alters the effects of morphine on body temperature by interfering with the ability of the rats to adjust their posture. The thermic effects of 5 doses of morphine (3.8 to 45 mg/kg) were compared in two types of restraint and confinement to a 13×20×20 cm pan without restrained, rats morphine caused predominantly hyperthermia, but with restraint morphine caused hyperthermia at low doses and hypothermia at higher doses. Morphine hypothermia was greater in rats restrained in rawire-mesh restrainer which prevented heat and humidity build-up than in the commonly used plastic restrainer. In the unrestrained rats, morphine treatment was associated with a posture characterized by exophthalamos, immobility, a hunched position and increased muscle tone. Restrained rats could not assume a compact posture. These results suggest that restraint alters the thermic effect of morphine and mainly by interferiing with postural mechanisms which reduce heat loss. |
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Keywords: | Body temperature Morphine Restraint Stress Thermoregulation |
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