Psychopharmacology
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It has been suggested that endogenous opiate mechanisms may be involved in the physiological control of food and water intake. Support for this hypothesis has been obtained from studies of the effects of narcotic antagonists which reduce feeding and drinking, but it is also necessary to show that food and water intake can be facilitated by opiate agonists. ⋯ The increased food intake produced by the putative mu receptor agonists morphine and RX 783030 was blocked by a dose of naloxone which did not affect the facilitation of eating produced by ethylketocyclazocine, which may act at a separate population of receptors known as kappa receptors. These data are consistent with the possibility that opiate receptors are involved in the control of feeding and drinking.
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The effects of long-acting narcotic agonist preparations on the severe withdrawal syndrome following abrupt cessation of daily injections of codeine phosphate were studied in rats. Twelve hours after the last codeine injections, one injection of either a high or low dose of the zinc tannate salt of heroin, levo-alpha-acetylmethadol (LAAM) or hydromorphone in slow-release vehicle (SRV) was administered. Body weight, core temperature and hyperirritability scores (Teiger, 1974) were recorded every 6 h for the next 3 days. ⋯ All rats injected with either LAAM or hydromorphone zinc tannate exhibited prolonged marked hyperthermia, but the low, the high dose heroin groups and the SRV groups showed no significant differences in diurnal temperature patterns. Rats treated with the narcotic agonists were generally less irritable, as indicated by lower Teiger scores. These results indicate that a single injection of heroin, LAAM or hydromorphone zinc tannate can ameliorate the characteristic and intense signs of abstinence following withdrawal from codeine.