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A Small Dose of Morphine Leads Rats to Drink More Alcohol and Achieve Higher Blood Alcohol Concentrations
Authors:Christopher L Hubbell  Russell F Mankes  Larry D Reid
Institution:Department of Psychology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York;Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Albany Medical College, Albany, New York.
Abstract:Male Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on a daily regimen of 22 hr of fluid deprivation followed by a 2-hr opportunity to take a sweetened alcoholic beverage and water for over 6 months. Durinc the week before the formal procedures of the experiment describee herein, access to the alcoholic beverage was limited to 1.5 hr, but access to water was still for 2 hr. Intakes of ethanol, in terms of g/kg, were tabulated at 30 min for half of the rats and at 90 min for the rest. On the day of formal procedures, half of the rats of the 30- and 90-min measures were given 1 mg/kg of morphine sulfate just before the drinking session, whereas the rest received physiological saline Morphine increased mean g/kg intakes of ethanol, as compared with controls, at 30 and 90 min. Blood alcohol levels were also increased These data suggest that the well-documented ability of small doses of morphine to increase rats' intake of ethanol is probably not related to its ability to produce gastrointestinal effects, but rather due to its ability to modulate central motivational mechanisms associated with ingestion.
Keywords:Morphine  Rats' Intake of Alcohol  Blood Alcoho Concentration  Opioids  
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