Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats
Combined use of an opioid with a psychostimulant is popular among drug abusers. Such “polydrug use” may increase drug effects or attenuate adverse effects of either drug alone. We proposed that a combination of methamphetamine (meth) and morphine may change physical opioid withdrawal symptoms. Adult...
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Iran University of Medical Sciences
2014-02-01
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doaj-8bba3c792c02413cb41e99385cd3d9df2020-11-25T00:23:20ZengIran University of Medical SciencesBasic and Clinical Neuroscience2008-126X2228-74422014-02-01514247Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in RatsGholamreza Kaka0Ramin Rahmanzade1Farzin Safee2Abbas Haghparast3 Neuroscience Research Center, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran. Neuroscience Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. Neuroscience Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. Neuroscience Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. Combined use of an opioid with a psychostimulant is popular among drug abusers. Such “polydrug use” may increase drug effects or attenuate adverse effects of either drug alone. We proposed that a combination of methamphetamine (meth) and morphine may change physical opioid withdrawal symptoms. Adult male rats were chronically injected with cumulative subcutaneous (s.c.) doses of morphine, meth or a combination of both drugs within five days. On day six, a challenge dose of the same drug was injected. Two hours later, precipitated withdrawal symptoms were scored within 30 minutes after naloxone (1mg/kg, i.p.) injection. Both frequency and incidence of jumping significantly increased in combined treated animals (P<0.05). The sole emergent symptom in combined treated animals was digging which we consider as another escaping behavior in addition to jumping. Our findings imply that combined use of meth and morphine may exacerbate averseness of morphine withdrawal which may cause more intense opioid dependencehttp://bcn.iums.ac.ir/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-194&slc_lang=en&sid=1Polydrug Use Morphine Meth Naloxone Withdrawal Syndrome Rat |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Gholamreza Kaka Ramin Rahmanzade Farzin Safee Abbas Haghparast |
spellingShingle |
Gholamreza Kaka Ramin Rahmanzade Farzin Safee Abbas Haghparast Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats Basic and Clinical Neuroscience Polydrug Use Morphine Meth Naloxone Withdrawal Syndrome Rat |
author_facet |
Gholamreza Kaka Ramin Rahmanzade Farzin Safee Abbas Haghparast |
author_sort |
Gholamreza Kaka |
title |
Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats |
title_short |
Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats |
title_full |
Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats |
title_fullStr |
Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats |
title_full_unstemmed |
Naloxone Induces Frequent Jumping after Chronic Morphine and Methamphetamine Co-Administration in Rats |
title_sort |
naloxone induces frequent jumping after chronic morphine and methamphetamine co-administration in rats |
publisher |
Iran University of Medical Sciences |
series |
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience |
issn |
2008-126X 2228-7442 |
publishDate |
2014-02-01 |
description |
Combined use of an opioid with a psychostimulant is popular among drug abusers. Such “polydrug use” may increase drug effects or attenuate adverse effects of either drug alone. We proposed that a combination of methamphetamine (meth) and morphine may change physical opioid withdrawal symptoms. Adult male rats were chronically injected with cumulative subcutaneous (s.c.) doses of morphine, meth or a combination of both drugs within five days. On day six, a challenge dose of the same drug was injected. Two hours later, precipitated withdrawal symptoms were scored within 30 minutes after naloxone (1mg/kg, i.p.) injection. Both frequency and incidence of jumping significantly increased in combined treated animals (P<0.05). The sole emergent symptom in combined treated animals was digging which we consider as another escaping behavior in addition to jumping. Our findings imply that combined use of meth and morphine may exacerbate averseness of morphine withdrawal which may cause more intense opioid dependence |
topic |
Polydrug Use Morphine Meth Naloxone Withdrawal Syndrome Rat |
url |
http://bcn.iums.ac.ir/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-194&slc_lang=en&sid=1 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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