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Low dose of morphine strongly depresses responses of specific nociceptive neurones in the ventrobasal complex of the rat
61
Citations
44
References
1983
Year
Effects of low intravenous doses of morphine (30, 100 and 1000 micrograms/kg) upon unitary responses of 22 'nociceptive' and 5 'non-nociceptive' units recorded in the ventrobasal (VB) complex of the rat were analyzed. The responses of the 'non-noxious' neurones were not depressed by morphine. By contrast, for all these doses there was a decrease of the total number of spikes and of the maximal firing rate of the responses of the noxious neurones. The depressive effect was significantly dose-related (with linear semi-logarithmic dose-response curve) and naloxone-reversible. Similar effects were observed upon responses to pinches and noxious heat. The ED50 which was close to 90 micrograms/kg for these thalamic responses to pinches is much more lower than that evaluated for spinal dorsal horn responses under the same anaesthetic conditions. Therefore the depressive effect of low doses observed for VB neurones seems to be mainly of supraspinal origin.
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