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Temporal factors affecting cocaine-opioid interactions : A cocaine drug discrimination study in rats

Increasing concomitant abuse of cocaine and morphine-like opioids has prompted a number of studies aimed at understanding how these drugs interact. The present study was designed to determine if variations in opioid pretreatment time would affect how mu opioid agonists interact with cocaine. Rats we...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Psychopharmacologia 2001-08, Vol.156 (4), p.427-434
Main Authors: GREEN-JORDAN, K, WARREN, L, KANTAK, K. M
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Increasing concomitant abuse of cocaine and morphine-like opioids has prompted a number of studies aimed at understanding how these drugs interact. The present study was designed to determine if variations in opioid pretreatment time would affect how mu opioid agonists interact with cocaine. Rats were trained to discriminate 10 mg/kg cocaine from saline. One group of subjects (n=6) received morphine (5.6 mg/kg) 0.5 h, 1 h or 4 h prior to cumulative doses of cocaine (0.1-17.8 mg/kg). These pretreatment times were selected to overlap with states of acute opioid tolerance (approximately 1 h) or acute opioid dependence (approximately 4 h) as demonstrated by previous studies. A second group (n=6) was administered naloxone (0.3 mg/kg) 5 min prior to cumulative cocaine doses, with or without a 4-h morphine (5.6 mg/kg) or methadone (3.0 mg/kg) pretreatment. In a third procedure, the same subjects used in the second experiment were also tested for time-dependent changes in the analgesic effect of morphine using a hot-plate assay. Morphine pretreatment 1 h prior to assessment of the cocaine dose-response function significantly enhanced the discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine. However, neither 0.5-h or 4-h morphine pretreatment had any effect. In contrast, when naloxone was administered 4 h following either morphine or methadone and 5 min prior to assessment of the cocaine dose-response curve, the discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine were significantly attenuated. In assessing morphine-induced analgesia, paw-lick latency was significantly longer at 1 h and shorter at 4 h following morphine administration. The results illustrate the importance of temporal parameters for interactions between cocaine and mu opioid agonists.
ISSN:0033-3158
1432-2072
DOI:10.1007/s002130100732