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Cotreatment with Racemic Fenfluramine Inhibits the Development of Tolerance to Morphine Analgesia in Rats
As a follow-up study to an earlier report that racemic fenfluramine can acutely potentiate the analgesic effects of morphine in humans, we investigated the effects of fenfluramine on the development of tolerance to morphine analgesia in rats. Antinociceptive effect, as measured by the tail-flick lat...
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Published in: | The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 1998-08, Vol.286 (2), p.585-592 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | As a follow-up study to an earlier report that racemic fenfluramine can acutely potentiate the analgesic effects of morphine
in humans, we investigated the effects of fenfluramine on the development of tolerance to morphine analgesia in rats. Antinociceptive
effect, as measured by the tail-flick latency, was studied over 8 days in rats that received continuous i.v. infusion of 1)
22 mg/kg/day of morphine, 2) 20 mg/kg/day of fenfluramine, 3) both drugs concomitantly or 4) saline. Infusion with morphine
alone resulted in a peak analgesia of 100% maximal possible effect, which declined with time; full tolerance was reached by
day 4. Fenfluramine treatment alone had no effect. Fenfluramine coinfusion attenuated the development of tolerance to morphine;
>70% maximal possible effect was still present on day 4. The effect of fenfluramine coinfusion occurred in the absence of
a significant increase in plasma or brain morphine concentration, or a decrease in the accumulation of morphineâs putative
antagonistic metabolite, morphine-3-glucuronide. In another set of infusion experiments, rats were challenged with a single
i.p. dose of morphine to characterize the morphine dose-response curves at 10 hr following 4-day i.v. infusion of 1) 22 mg/kg/day
of morphine, 2) 20 mg/kg/day fenfluramine, 3) morphine plus fenfluramine or 4) saline. An acute i.p. morphine challenge dose
response experiment was also conducted in naıÌve control rats and in rats receiving a concomitant i.p. injection of fenfluramine
(2.4 mg/kg). Coinjection of fenfluramine acutely potentiated the antinociceptive potency of morphine. However, potentiation
alone does not fully account for the apparent attenuation of tolerance during morphine i.v. infusion. ED 50 of morphine was elevated to 7.0 mg/kg in the morphine-infused rats compared to 2.4 mg/kg in saline-infused rats. Coinfusion
of fenfluramine increased ED 50 to only 3.7 mg/kg. These results demonstrate that fenfluramine significantly attenuates tolerance development to morphine
by modulating the pharmacological process responsible for tolerance development to morphine. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3565 1521-0103 |