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Vol. 300, Issue 2, 588-596, February 2002
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (K.J.P., N.S.A.-H.,
K.J.), Department of Psychology (A.J., M.C.O., R.J.B.), and Department
of Psychiatry (R.J.B.), Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Opioid agonists such as morphine have been found to exert excitatory
and inhibitory receptor-mediated effects at low and high doses,
respectively. Ultra-low doses of opioid antagonists (naloxone and naltrexone), which selectively inhibit the excitatory effects, have
been reported to augment systemic morphine analgesia and inhibit the
development of tolerance/physical dependence. This study investigated
the site of action of the paradoxical effects of naltrexone and the
generality of this effect. The potential of ultra-low doses of
naltrexone to influence morphine-induced analgesia was investigated in
tests of nociception. Administration of intrathecal (0.05 and 0.1 ng) or systemic (10 ng/kg i.p.) naltrexone augmented the
antinociception produced by an acute submaximal dose of intrathecal (5 µg) or systemic (7.5 mg/kg i.p.) morphine in the tail-flick test.
Chronic intrathecal (0.005 and 0.05 ng) or systemic (10 ng/kg)
naltrexone combined with morphine (15 µg i.t.; 15 mg/kg i.p.) over a
7-day period inhibited the decline in morphine antinociception and
prevented the loss of morphine potency. In animals rendered tolerant to
intrathecal (15 µg) or systemic (15 mg/kg) morphine, administration
of naltrexone (0.05 ng i.t.; 10 and 50 ng/kg i.p.) significantly
restored the antinociceptive effect and potency of morphine. Thus, in
ultra-low doses, naltrexone paradoxically enhances morphine analgesia
and inhibits or reverses tolerance through a spinal action. The
potential of naltrexone to influence morphine-induced reward was also
investigated using a place preference paradigm. Systemic administration
of ultra-low doses of naltrexone (16.7, 20.0, and 25.0 ng/kg) with
morphine (1.0 mg/kg) extended the duration of the morphine-induced
conditioned place preference. These effects of naltrexone on
morphine-induced reward may have implications for chronic treatment
with agonist-antagonist combinations.