Drug and alcohol dependence
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Drug Alcohol Depend · May 1999
Inhibitors of cytochrome P450 differentially modify discriminative-stimulus and antinociceptive effects of hydrocodone and hydromorphone in rhesus monkeys.
The present study was conducted to investigate the role of cytochrome P450 in the discriminative-stimulus and antinociceptive effects of hydrocodone (HC) and hydromorphone (HM) in rhesus monkeys. In morphine-deprived monkeys, morphine dose-dependently reversed naltrexone-lever responding, an effect also produced by HC and HM. HC and HM also produced antinociception in a warm-water tail withdrawal procedure. ⋯ In contrast, naltrexone, but not budipine (10.0 mg/kg) or quinidine (10.0 mg/kg), dose-dependently antagonized the antinociceptive effects of HC. Budipine and quinidine decreased the concentration of HM in plasma without significantly affecting the levels of HC, suggesting that these CYP2D6 inhibitors decreased the conversion of HC HM. Thus, some behavioral effects of HC are not modified by a marked inhibition of CYP2D6, suggesting that these effects of HC are not due to its conversion to HM but, rather, that both HC and HM act directly on mu receptors.