Jb. Overmier et R. Murison, DIFFERING MECHANISMS FOR PROACTIVE EFFECTS OF INTERMITTENT AND SINGLESHOCK ON GASTRIC-ULCERATION, Physiology & behavior, 56(5), 1994, pp. 913-919
Rats exposed to either 80 5-s shocks on a VT 60-s or to a single 400-s
shock plus 80-min rest in the shock apparatus show dramatically incre
ased degree of ulceration induced 72 h later by exposure to 75-min res
traint-in-water stress (at 19 degrees C). However, the proactive effec
t of the 80 shocks on later gastric ulceration was blocked by SC injec
tion of 7 mg/kg naltrexone 20 min prior to the shock session; naltrexo
ne treatment prior to the single shock session had no ameliorating eff
ect. A second experiment confirmed opioid involvement in the proactive
augmentation of vulnerability by showing that when a 20 mg/kg injecti
on of morphine replaced the shocks, rats showed a comparable increase
in vulnerability. A third experiment replicated the basic findings fro
m the first experiments that 80 intermittent shocks increase vulnerabi
lity to the ulcerogenicity of restraint-in-water and that this effect
can be mimicked by replacing the shock stress with a 20 mg/kg injectio
n of morphine; however, other groups showed that injection of 40 mg/kg
produced a similar effect whereas 10 mg/kg was ineffective as a mimic
. This suggests that there are at least two types of proactive effects
from shock experiences that can increase later vulnerability to shock
-induced gastric ulceration; one is opioid mediated and the other is n
ot. This finding parallels reports made about mediation of prior shock
-induced hypoalgesias and expands the spectrum to psychosomatic phenom
enon.