Chronic inflammatory pain reduces fentanyl intake during early acquisition of fentanyl self-administration, but does not change motivation to take fentanyl in male and female rats
Angela E. Barattini , Nicholas W. Gilpin , Amanda R. Pahng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The co-occurrence of chronic pain and opioid misuse has led to numerous preclinical investigations of pain-opioid interactions to examine how pain manipulations alter the reinforcing properties of opioids. However, preclinical investigations of chronic pain effects on opioid drug self-administration have produced inconsistent results. Our previous work demonstrated that established fentanyl self-administration is resistant to change by induction of chronic inflammatory pain (Complete Freund's Adjuvant; CFA) in male and female rats, while other laboratories have shown that CFA increased fentanyl self-administration in male but not female rats when pain induction precedes self-administration, which may be a critical factor in determining the effects of chronic pain on self-administration. The present study was designed similarly to Higginbotham et al. (2022) to test the effects of CFA on fentanyl self-administration in rats that underwent pain prior to acquisition of fentanyl self-administration. Male and female rats treated with hindpaw CFA or saline were trained to intravenously self-administer (IVSA) fentanyl for 3 weeks under limited access to fentanyl (2 h per day) conditions. After 3 weeks of fentanyl IVSA acquisition, we tested motivation to take fentanyl using progressive ratio testing and dose-response testing. CFA male and female rats self-administered less fentanyl than saline-treated controls during week 1 of acquisition, but not during weeks 2–3 of acquisition. Intra-session analysis of week 1 data demonstrated that chronic inflammatory pain suppressed fentanyl intake towards the end of week 1 and at the end of each operant session. We also report no effects of chronic inflammatory pain on motivation to take fentanyl. We discuss potential methodological explanations for differences between these results and prior reports. Our findings demonstrate that CFA temporarily suppresses fentanyl IVSA in animals without changing motivation to take fentanyl or promoting escalation of opioid use, suggesting that chronic inflammatory pain is unlikely to promote long-term risk of opioid misuse.
期刊介绍:
Pharmacology Biochemistry & Behavior publishes original reports in the areas of pharmacology and biochemistry in which the primary emphasis and theoretical context are behavioral. Contributions may involve clinical, preclinical, or basic research. Purely biochemical or toxicology studies will not be published. Papers describing the behavioral effects of novel drugs in models of psychiatric, neurological and cognitive disorders, and central pain must include a positive control unless the paper is on a disease where such a drug is not available yet. Papers focusing on physiological processes (e.g., peripheral pain mechanisms, body temperature regulation, seizure activity) are not accepted as we would like to retain the focus of Pharmacology Biochemistry & Behavior on behavior and its interaction with the biochemistry and neurochemistry of the central nervous system. Papers describing the effects of plant materials are generally not considered, unless the active ingredients are studied, the extraction method is well described, the doses tested are known, and clear and definite experimental evidence on the mechanism of action of the active ingredients is provided.