Effect of naloxone and morphine on dopamine agonist-induced stereotypy in rats and guinea pigs

J. Feigenbaum*, J. Yanai, B. Moon, H. Klawans

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Naloxone (0.80 mg/kg) and morphine (7.5 mg/kg) were given to rats or guinea pigs with increasing doses of amphetamine (0.5-6.0 mg/kg) to determine their respective effects on amphetamine-induced stereotypy. In contrast to the inhibiting and potentiating effect of these agents on apomorphine-induced stereotyped behavior, naloxone enhanced and morphine markedly attenuated amphetamine-induced stereotypy. Since other investigators have reported that drugs inhibiting release of dopamine block amphetamine-induced stereotypy and enhance apomorphine-induced stereotypy, whilst compounds stimulating the release of dopamine potentiate amphetamine-induced stereotypy and inhibit apomorphine-elicited stereotyped behavior, it is likely that naloxone stimulates and morphine inhibits the release of DA following their acute administration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1369-1376
Number of pages8
JournalNeuropharmacology
Volume22
Issue number12 PART 2
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1983

Keywords

  • apomorphine
  • d-amphetamine
  • dopamine receptor
  • guinea pig
  • morphine
  • naloxone
  • rat
  • stereotyped behavior
  • striatum

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