Abstract
The effects of naltrexone on ventilation were examined in three rhesus monkeys maintained on 3.2 mg/kg/day morphine. Before the onset of the daily morphine-dosing regimen, naltrexone had only modest effects on ventilation; a dose of 32 mg/kg increased ventilatory rate in the presence of normal air to 36 ± 1 breaths/min, from a baseline rate of 25 ± 1 breaths/min. Naltrexone did not affect other measures of ventilation in the presence of normal air or 5% CO2. Subsequent to the onset of the daily morphine injection regimen, naltrexone dose-dependently increased ventilatory rate at doses 4 orders of magnitude lower (0.001–0.01 mg/kg) than those effective in nondependent monkeys. A dose of 0.01 mg/kg naltrexone in morphine-maintained monkeys increased ventilatory rate in the presence of normal air to 52 ± 4 breaths/min. Naltrexone also dose-dependently increased ventilatory rate in the presence of 3% and 5% CO2; tidal volume was not affected by naltrexone administration. Doubling the maintenance dose of morphine to 6.4 mg/kg/day further increased the ventilatory effects of naltrexone. Withholding the maintenance dose of morphine also increased ventilatory rate without affecting tidal volumes, in a manner similar to that seen after naltrexone administration. These results are consistent with the view that changes in ventilation can be used to measure precipitated and abstinence-associated opioid withdrawal in monkeys.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: Carol A. Paronis, Harvard Medical School, ADARC-McLean Hospital, 115 Mill St., Belmont, MA 02178-9108.
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↵1 This work was supported by USPHS grants DA00254, DA 07268 and DA 05653 from NIDA.
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↵2 Preliminary results were presented at the 57th annual meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence, Scottsdale, AZ, 1995.
- Abbreviations:
- ANOVA
- analysis of variance
- f
- breathing frequency
- VT
- tidal volume
- VE
- minute volume
- Received October 16, 1996.
- Accepted March 31, 1997.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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