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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 713-720, 1997
Division of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, The University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Limited information is available about how the time course of the
development of tolerance to morphine-induced antinociception is related
to the kinetics of drug administration and disposition. The objectives
of the present experiment were to characterize the rate and extent of
tolerance development during the administration of multiple increasing
i.v. bolus doses of morphine to rats, and to construct a
pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model of morphine tolerance. Morphine
was administered according to two different treatment (TXT) regimens: a
12-hr TXT, in which a total morphine exposure of 24 mg/kg was
administered in seven escalating doses, and a 13-day TXT, in which
escalating doses of morphine were administered daily up to a maximum of
6 mg/kg. Analgesic effect, expressed as the percent of maximum possible
response, was assessed with the hot water-induced tail flick. Serum
samples were collected for determination of morphine concentrations by
HPLC. Concentration-normalized peak effects, measured after each
morphine dose, remained constant throughout the 12-hr study period,
which suggests that there was little or no tolerance development during
the 12-hr TXT. In contrast, tolerance appeared more significant during
administration of the 13-day TXT; a large decrease in normalized peak
effect occurred between days 1 and 8. Effect remained constant
thereafter, with administration of the maximum dose of morphine for the
remainder of the treatment period. A pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic
model describing the development of tolerance during the 13-day TXT was
constructed. The applicability of this model of tolerance to
morphine-induced antinociception with different modes of administration is discussed.
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