Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology
1980, Vol. 94, No. 6, 1172-1183

Opiate Antagonists and Long-Term Analgesic Reaction Induced by Inescapable Shock in Rats

Steven F. Maier Susan Davies James W. Grau,
Raymond L. Jackson, Daniel H. Morrison, and Thomas Moye
University of Colorado
 
John Madden IV and Jack D. Barchas
Nancy Pritzker Laboratory of Behavioral Neurochemistry Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Stanford University School of Medicine

 

Five experiments examined the influence of opiate antagonists on both the short-term analgesic reaction resulting 30 min after exposure to inescapable shock and the long-term analgesic reaction resulting after re-exposure to shock 24 hr after inescapable shock exposure. Experiment 1 showed that the long-term analgesic reaction could be reduced by administration of naltrexone prior to exposure to inescapable tail shock. Experiment 2 showed that the reduction in the long-term analgesic reaction produced by naltrexone was dose-dependent. Experiment 3 showed that the long-term analgesic reaction could also be reduced by administration of naltrexone prior to re-exposure to shock. Experiment 4 showed that the long-term analgesic reaction could be reduced by administration of a large dose of naloxone prior to re-exposure to shock. Experiment 5 showed that the short-term analgesic reaction was reduced by naltrexone administered prior to inescapable shock. Some implications of these results for the biochemical substrates of both learned helplessness and stress-induced analgesia are discussed.

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