IMMOBILIZATION STRESS-INDUCED ORAL OPIOID SELF-ADMINISTRATION AND WITHDRAWAL IN RATS - ROLE OF CONDITIONING FACTORS AND THE EFFECT OF STRESS ON RELAPSE TO OPIOID DRUGS
Y. Shaham, IMMOBILIZATION STRESS-INDUCED ORAL OPIOID SELF-ADMINISTRATION AND WITHDRAWAL IN RATS - ROLE OF CONDITIONING FACTORS AND THE EFFECT OF STRESS ON RELAPSE TO OPIOID DRUGS, Psychopharmacology, 111(4), 1993, pp. 477-485
The effect of 15 min/day of immobilization (IM) stress on oral self-ad
ministration (SA) of morphine (0.5 mg/ml) or fentanyl (25 mug/ml) and
withdrawal was examined in rats. In addition, the role of conditioning
factors in these effects was assessed. For each drug, four groups of
subjects were exposed for 50 days to IM stress prior to the drug SA pe
riod [Paired-Stress (P-S) groups], to IM stress prior to the drug SA p
eriod on half of the days and after the drug SA period on the rest of
the days [Partial Paired-Stress (PP-S) groups], to IM stress several h
ours after the drug SA period [Unpaired-Stress (UP-S) groups], or to n
o IM stress [Control (C) groups]. The P-S and PP-S groups increased th
eir drug SA during choice days in which both the opioid solution and w
ater were available, and tended to manifest a more severe withdrawal s
yndrome after a naloxone challenge compared with the UP-S and C groups
. Reinstatement of the opioid SA under conditions of paired-stress or
no stress was further examined after 3 weeks without exposure to eithe
r stress or drugs. The paired stress animals had higher levels of drug
SA and manifested a more severe withdrawal syndrome than those tested
without stress. These results indicate that the learned association b
etween exposure to stress and the drug availability may mediate, in pa
rt, the stress-induced enhancement of opioid SA and withdrawal effects
.