Tolerance to nitrous oxide analgesia in rats and mice

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Abstract

The purpose of these experiments was to characterize the nature of tolerance to the analgesic action of nitrous oxide. Analgesia was assessed in rats using a tail-flick latency test and in mice using an abdominal constriction test. Rats and mice were exposed to nitrous oxide, 75%, the balance oxygen, continously for 16-18 hours. On re-exposure to nitrous oxide 30 min later, these animals were found to tolerant to nitrous oxide in that the analgesic response was decreased by at least 50%. Animals tolerant to nitrous oxide were not tolerant to morphine. Morphine (0.25-1.5 mg/kg) produced equal degrees of analgesia in control and nitrous oxide-tolerant mice and rats. In contrast, rats made tolerant to morphine by repeated daily injections of as much as 400 mg/kg subcutaneously or by subcutaneous implantation of morphine pellets (75 mg, twice) showed a decreased analgesic response to nitrous oxide. Thus the cross-tolerance between nitrous oxide and morphine appears unique in that it is unidirectional.

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Berkowitz, B. A., Finck, A. D., Hynes, M. D., & Ngai, S. H. (1979). Tolerance to nitrous oxide analgesia in rats and mice. Anesthesiology, 51(4), 309–312. https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-197910000-00006

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