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Heroin and morphine: Aversive and analgesic effects in rats
Authors:L. Switzman  T. Hunt  Z. Amit
Affiliation:Center for Research on Drug Dependence, Concordia University 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3G 1M8
Abstract:Although a number of studies demonstrate morphine-induced taste aversions, no such reports exist for heroin. In a conventional taste aversion paradigm, rats were injected with one of six heroin doses (0.5–12.0 mg/kg) after consuming a novel saccharin solution (Experiment 1). When the saccharin was reintroduced a second time no significant reduction in consumption occuredd at any of the doses tested. It was therefore concluded that heroin does not readily induce a taste aversion. In experiment 2, morphine was tested in an identical taste aversion paradigm and, as expected, a significant taste aversion.did result at two of the doses tested. Experiment 3 demonstrated that heroin produced analgesia equal to or greater than morphine when comparing dosages of heroin which failed to induce a CTA with CTA-inducing morphine dosages. Thus, whereas heroin is more potent than morphine as an analgesic, heroin is less potent than morphine as a CTA-inducing agent.
Keywords:Heroin  Morphine  Conditioned taste aversion  Analgesia  Temporal properties
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