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Acute opiate withdrawal in rats undernourished during infancy: impact of the undernutrition method
Authors:C A Cohen  J Tonkiss  S B Sparber
Institution:Department of Pharmacology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455.
Abstract:Acute morphine withdrawal was assessed in adult rats following early postnatal undernutrition produced by two different methods (Large Litter procedure-20 pups/litter and Modified Slob procedure-rats cross-fostered on days 2, 4, and 6 to nonlactating dams for 24-hour periods). Response rates were first stabilized on a FR16 operant schedule. A single dose of morphine (20 mg/kg) was then administered, followed 4 h later by a single injection of naloxone (2.5 mg/kg). Males reared in large litters showed little behavioral disruption after morphine, suggesting either insensitivity to the opiate or the rapid development of tolerance. After naloxone. Modified Slob males displayed milder withdrawal than those in the well-nourished control or large litter groups. Thus the method of undernutrition influenced morphine's action and expression of withdrawal. A clear sex difference was also evident, females appearing to be generally less sensitive to the opiate- and naloxone-induced withdrawal than males. Body temperature underwent a characteristic elevation following morphine and a depression following naloxone across all groups, but undernutrition did not affect these responses. Hence, behavior proved to be the more sensitive measure for revealing differences in opiate dependence and withdrawal following early life undernutrition, under the test conditions employed.
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