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Vol. 282, Issue 1, 348-354, 1997
Departments of
Pharmacology (C.A.P., J.H.W.) and
Psychology
(J.H.W.), The University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan
The effects of naltrexone on ventilation were examined in three rhesus
monkeys maintained on 3.2 mg/kg/day morphine. Before the onset of the
daily morphine-dosing regimen, naltrexone had only modest effects on
ventilation; a dose of 32 mg/kg increased ventilatory rate in the
presence of normal air to 36 ± 1 breaths/min, from a baseline
rate of 25 ± 1 breaths/min. Naltrexone did not affect other
measures of ventilation in the presence of normal air or 5%
CO2. Subsequent to the onset of the daily morphine
injection regimen, naltrexone dose-dependently increased ventilatory
rate at doses 4 orders of magnitude lower (0.001-0.01 mg/kg) than
those effective in nondependent monkeys. A dose of 0.01 mg/kg
naltrexone in morphine-maintained monkeys increased ventilatory rate in
the presence of normal air to 52 ± 4 breaths/min. Naltrexone also dose-dependently increased ventilatory rate in the presence of 3% and
5% CO2; tidal volume was not affected by naltrexone
administration. Doubling the maintenance dose of morphine to 6.4 mg/kg/day further increased the ventilatory effects of naltrexone.
Withholding the maintenance dose of morphine also increased ventilatory
rate without affecting tidal volumes, in a manner similar to that seen
after naltrexone administration. These results are consistent with the view that changes in ventilation can be used to measure precipitated and abstinence-associated opioid withdrawal in monkeys.