Acquisition and expression of conditioned hypoalgesia in morphine-naive and morphine-tolerant rats

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Abstract

The present study used a within-subject design to examine acquisition and expression of conditioned hypoalgesia in 50 male Wistar rats. Morphine-naive rats preexposed to a heat stressor with saline were hypoalgesic when subsequently tested for latencies to tail flick or paw lick. However, morphine-tolerant rats preexposed to the heat stressor with saline failed to display hypoalgesia when tested for latencies to tail flick, but showed hypoalgesia when tested for latencies to paw lick. Taken together, these findings suggest that expression of conditioned hypoalgesic responses in morphine-tolerant rats may depend on the nociceptive test used. Both morphine-naive and morphine-tolerant rats preexposed to the heat stressor with morphine failed to display hypoalgesia on either the tail-flick or the hot-plate test, demonstrating that morphine's ability to block acquisition of conditioned hypoalgesia is independent of the test used to assess nociceptive sensitivity. Copyright (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Inc.

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APA

Foo, H. (1999). Acquisition and expression of conditioned hypoalgesia in morphine-naive and morphine-tolerant rats. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 62(3), 433–437. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0091-3057(98)00189-0

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