An analysis of the paradoxical effect of morphine on runway speed and food consumption

A previously reported paradigm in which rats run down a runway for food reward followed by morphine injection was analyzed to assess the utility of the paradigm in studies of opiate reinforcement. One experiment replicated the original report that post-trial morphine caused both an increase in runwa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychopharmacology 1986-01, Vol.89 (3), p.327-333
Hauptverfasser: Corrigall, W A, Linseman, M A, D'Onofrio, R M, Lei, H
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container_end_page 333
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container_start_page 327
container_title Psychopharmacology
container_volume 89
creator Corrigall, W A
Linseman, M A
D'Onofrio, R M
Lei, H
description A previously reported paradigm in which rats run down a runway for food reward followed by morphine injection was analyzed to assess the utility of the paradigm in studies of opiate reinforcement. One experiment replicated the original report that post-trial morphine caused both an increase in runway speed and a decrease in food consumption (taste aversion) over successive trials, and showed in addition that the increase in runway speed did not occur as a result of food deprivation alone, but required the animals to have consumed food in the goal box. A second study using the quaternary opiate antagonist methyl naltrexone to block the peripheral effects of morphine suggested that the increase in runway speed has a peripheral locus while the taste aversion has a central one. A third experiment in which morphine was microinjected into either the lateral ventricle or the ventral tegmental area supported these observations, in that intracranial morphine failed to result in an increased runway speed, but did produce taste aversion after microinjection into either site. These findings also suggest that the increase in runway speed caused by post-trial morphine in this experiment has a peripheral locus of effect, which is probably distinct from the central effect that supports morphine self-administration and conditioned place preference.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/BF00174369
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subjects Animals
Avoidance Learning
Feeding Behavior - drug effects
Food Deprivation
Male
Morphine - pharmacology
Motivation - drug effects
Naltrexone - analogs & derivatives
Naltrexone - pharmacology
Nervous System - drug effects
Quaternary Ammonium Compounds
Rats
Rats, Inbred Strains
Reward
Taste - drug effects
Tegmentum Mesencephali - drug effects
title An analysis of the paradoxical effect of morphine on runway speed and food consumption
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