• Neuroscience · Jun 1993

    Opioid and substance P receptor adaptations in the rat spinal cord following sub-chronic intrathecal treatment with morphine and naloxone.

    • C Gouarderes, K Jhamandas, R Cridland, J Cros, R Quirion, and J M Zajac.
    • Laboratoire de Pharmacologie et de Toxicologie Fondamentales, C.N.R.S., Toulouse, France.
    • Neuroscience. 1993 Jun 1; 54 (3): 799-807.

    AbstractThe effect of continuous intrathecal infusion with morphine (5 mu/h) or naloxone (2 micrograms/h) was investigated with regard to analgesia and the apparent density of mu- and delta-opioid and neurokinin-I/substance P receptors in the rat spinal cord. Morphine infusion increased tail-flick and paw-pressure responses until day 4 after the mini-osmotic pump implant. A decline in antinociception, reflecting tolerance to morphine, was then apparent in both tests. Quantitative in vitro receptor autoradiography of [125I]FK-33824, [125I][D.Ala2]deltorphin-I and [125I] Bolton-Hunter substance P binding sites, as ligands of mu, delta and neurokinin-I/substance P receptors, respectively, was performed on lumbosacral spinal cord sections of seven-days tolerant animals. Treatments with morphine and naloxone induced a similar increase (37%) in the number of delta binding sites in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn. In contrast, the density of mu-opioid receptors was only affected by naloxone (50% increase). Neurokinin-I/substance P binding parameters were not altered by these treatments. Thus, it appears that delta-opioid binding sites may be of special relevance with regard to the development of tolerance to opiates in the spinal cord.

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