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Article

Opiate self-administration as a measure of chronic nociceptive pain in arthritic rats

Colpaert, F. C.a,*; Tarayre, J. P.a; Alliaga, M.a; Bruins Slot, L. A.a; Attal, N.b; Koek, W.a

Author Information

aCentre de Recherche Pierre Fabre, 17 Avenue Jean Moulin, 81106 Castres cedex, France

bUnité d'Evaluation et Traitement de la Douleur, Hôpital Ambroise Paré, 9 Avenue Charles de Gaulle, 92100 Boulogne Billancourt cedex, France

*Corresponding author. Tel.: +33-563-71-42-71; fax:. +33-563-71-43-73

E-mail:[email protected]

Submitted June 13, 2000; revised August 9, 2000; accepted August 17, 2000.

Pain91(1):p 33-45, March 2001. |DOI:10.1016/S0304-3959(00)00413-9

Abstract

 

The study examined the validity of oral fentanyl self-administration (FSA) as a measure of the chronic nociceptive pain that develops in rats with adjuvant arthritis independently of acute noxious challenges. Arthritic rats self-administered more of a 0.008 mg/ml fentanyl solution (up to 3.4 g/rat per day) than non-arthritic controls (0.5 g/rat per day) and did so with a biphasic time course that reached peak during weeks 3 and 4 after inoculation withMycobacterium butyricum. The time course paralleled both the disease process and the chronic pain. Continuous infusion of dexamethasone during weeks 3 and 4 via subcutaneous osmotic pumps at 0.0025–0.04 mg/rat per day disrupted the arthritic disease and decreased FSA to a level (i.e. by 65%) similar to that observed in non-arthritic rats. Continuous naloxone (2.5 mg/rat per day) decreased FSA (by 55%) in arthritic but not in non-arthritic animals. Continuous, subcutaneous infusion of fentanyl also decreased arthritic FSA in a manner that varied with dose at 0.04–0.16 mg/rat per day doses, but leveled off at 47% of controls with 0.31 mg/rat per day. The effects of continuous fentanyl on arthritic FSA occurred only with those doses and dose-dependent dynamics with which fentanyl also induced dependence in non-arthritic rats. The findings indicate that pain, rather than the rewarding or dependence-inducing action of fentanyl mediates FSA in arthritic rats. Paralleling patient-controlled analgesic drug intake, FSA offers a specific measure allowing the dynamic effects of neurobiological agents to be studied in this unique animal model of persistent nociceptive pain.

© 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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