• Neuroscience letters · Jul 2003

    Comparative Study

    Absence of nalbuphine anti-analgesia in the rat.

    • Sachia G Khasar, Robert W Gear, and Jon D Levine.
    • Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.
    • Neurosci. Lett. 2003 Jul 24;345(3):165-8.

    AbstractIn humans, kappa agonist-antagonist opioids such as nalbuphine have been proposed to produce both analgesia and anti-analgesia by acting at distinct receptors. The anti-analgesia appears to be greater in men, which may contribute to the greater nalbuphine analgesia observed in women. Kappa agonist-antagonists are also known to produce sexually dimorphic antinociception in nonhuman species but are generally more potent in males; anti-analgesia has not been reported in animals. The aim of the present study was to determine if nalbuphine anti-analgesia can be detected in the rat. Since nalbuphine anti-analgesia is more sensitive to naloxone antagonism than its analgesic effect, low doses of naloxone were combined with nalbuphine. Using the Randall-Selitto paw-withdrawal test, nalbuphine (0.5-10 mg/kg) induced dose-dependent antinociception in the rat. The antinociceptive effect of nalbuphine (0.5 or 1 mg/kg) was not enhanced by lower doses of naloxone but was antagonized by higher doses. These data do not support the hypothesis that the naloxone-sensitive anti-analgesic effect of nalbuphine observed in humans is present in the rat and could explain, at least in part, the opposite direction of the sex differences for kappa agonist-antagonist opioid analgesia observed in these two species.

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