Antagonism of stress-induced analgesia by D-phenylalanine,an anti-enkephalinase |
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Authors: | Richard J. Bodnar Michael Lattner Margaret M. Wallace |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Queens College, C.U.N.Y., Flushing, NY 11367, USA |
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Abstract: | Methionine- and leucine-enkephalin produce mild and transient analgesic effects, presumably because of enzymatic degradation. Administration of high (250 mg/kg) doses of D-phenylalanine retards the degradation process and elicits analgesia which is reversed by naloxone and which summates with electroacupuncture analgesia. The present study evaluated D-phenylalanine's dose-dependent effects upon a non-opioid analgesic treatment, cold-water swims (CWS), and compared this with morphine. Following determination of flinch-jump baselines, three groups of rats recieved respectively either 25, 50 or 100 mg/kg of D-phenylalanine intraperitoneally in three conditions: alone, with CWS (2°C for 3.5 min), and with morphine (5 mg/kg, SC). Parallel controls with saline were also tested. Simultaneous exposure with each minimally analgesic dose of D-phenylalanine reduced significantly the analgesic, but not hypothermic effects of CWS. By contrast, morphine analgesia was unaffected by D-phenylalanine. These data provide further support that different pain-inhibitory systems mediate CWS and morphine analgesia and suggest that activation of one system is capable of exerting collateral inhibition upon the other. |
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Keywords: | Pain Analgesia Enkephalins D-Phenylalanine Cold-water swims Morphine Collateral inhibition |
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