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Abstract
A comparison of the effects of the short-acting opioid antagonist naloxone, with the
irreversible and highly-specific mu-1 antagonist naloxonazine, has categorized the
mediation of opioids in some forms of feeding into mu-1 and non-mu-1 components. The
mu-1 sites have been implicated in free-feeding, deprivation-induced feeding and morphine-induced
hyperphagia, based upon their sensitivity to both naloxone and naloxonazine. However,
the ability of naloxone, but not naloxonazine to inhibit feeding, induced by either
2-deoxy-D-glucose glucoprivation, ethylketocyclazocine, dynorphin or (D-ala2., D-leu5.)-enkephalin
implies the existence of non-mu-1 opioid receptor mechanisms in these responses. The
present study compared the effects of the daily administration of naloxone and naloxonazine
(10 mg/kg, i.v.) in rats in three different types of maturational or dietary situations.
In adult rats, naloxonazine and naloxone significantly reduced body weight (7% and
4%, respectively) and food intake (21% and 13%, respectively) over 14 days. These
effects were more pronounced in adolescent rats where naloxonazine and naloxone significantly
reduced the gain in body-weight (53% and 33%, respectively) and food intake (24% and
15%, respectively) over 14 days. In the adolescent rats, the effects of naloxonazine
were significantly greater than those of naloxone. In contrast, chronic treatment
with neither naloxone nor naloxonazine altered body weight or food intake of rats
made obese by dietary manipulations and left on that diet during treatment with antagonist.(ABSTRACT
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