PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - M B Gatch AU - S S Negus AU - E R Butelman AU - N K Mello TI - Antinociceptive effects of cocaine/opioid combinations in rhesus monkeys. DP - 1995 Dec 01 TA - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics PG - 1346--1354 VI - 275 IP - 3 4099 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/275/3/1346.short 4100 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/275/3/1346.full SO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther1995 Dec 01; 275 AB - This study characterized the antinociceptive effects of cocaine alone and in combination with mu, delta, and kappa opioids in rhesus monkeys. The shaved tails of four rhesus monkeys were exposed to warm water (42, 46, 50, 54, and 58 degrees C), and tail withdrawal latencies (20 sec maximum) from each temperature were determined. The temperature that produced a tail withdrawal latency of 10 sec (T10) was interpolated, and drug-induced changes in the T10 value (delta T10) were calculated. Dose-dependent increases in delta T10 were produced by cocaine (0.032-1.8 mg/kg), the high efficacy mu agonist fentanyl (0.001-0.1 mg/kg), the intermediate efficacy mu agonist morphine (0.1-18 mg/kg), the low efficacy mu agonist nalbuphine (1-32 mg/kg), and the kappa agonist U69,593 (0.0032-0.1 mg/kg). The delta agonist BW373U86 (0.56 mg/kg) produced no effect. Relative maximum effects, determined from the maximum delta T10 values produced by each drug, were fentanyl > or = (5,7,8 beta)-N-methyl-N[2-(1-pyrrolidinyl)1-oxaspiro[4,5]dec-8- yl]benzeneacetamide > morphine > nalbuphine > or = cocaine > BW373U86. When individual doses of cocaine (0.1-1.8 mg/kg) and morphine (0.32-10.0 mg/kg) were combined, cocaine produced a dose-dependent increase in the effects of each dose of morphine, and the antinociceptive effects of most cocaine/morphine combinations were significantly greater than the antinociceptive effects of either cocaine or morphine alone. Cocaine (1.8 mg/kg) was also combined with nalbuphine (1.0, 10 mg/kg), fentanyl (0.001, 0.032 mg/kg), BW373U86 (0.56 mg/kg) and U69,593 (0.0032-0.056 mg/kg). Cocaine/nalbuphine combinations produced effects markedly greater than either drug alone.