A small dose of morphine leads rats to drink more alcohol and achieve higher blood alcohol concentrations.

Male Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on a daily regimen of 22 hr of fluid deprivation followed by a 2-hr opportunity to take a sweetened alcoholic beverage and water for over 6 months. During the week before the formal procedures of the experiment described herein, access to the alcoholic beverage was limited to 1.5 hr, but access to water was still for 2 hr. Intakes of ethanol, in terms of g/kg, were tabulated at 30 min for half of the rats and at 90 min for the rest. On the day of formal procedures, half of the rats of the 30- and 90-min measures were given 1 mg/kg of morphine sulfate just before the drinking session, whereas the rest received physiological saline. Morphine increased mean g/kg intakes of ethanol, as compared with controls, at 30 and 90 min. Blood alcohol levels were also increased. These data suggest that the well-documented ability of small doses of morphine to increase rats' intake of ethanol is probably not related to its ability to produce gastrointestinal effects, but rather due to its ability to modulate central motivational mechanisms associated with ingestion.

[1]  B. Rounsaville,et al.  Naltrexone and coping skills therapy for alcohol dependence. A controlled study. , 1992, Archives of general psychiatry.

[2]  A. Alterman,et al.  Naltrexone in the treatment of alcohol dependence. , 1992, Archives of general psychiatry.

[3]  C. Hodge,et al.  Effects of morphine on acquisition and maintenance of ethanol and water intake patterns in rats. , 1992, Alcohol.

[4]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Opioids Modulate Rats’ Propensities to Take Alcoholic Beverages , 1992 .

[5]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Metabolites of Morphine and Intake of an Alcoholic Beverage , 1992 .

[6]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Morphine Enhances Intake of an Alcoholic Beverage Regardless of Type of Flavoring , 1992 .

[7]  B. Rounsaville,et al.  Naltrexone in the Treatment of Alcohol Dependence: Preliminary Findings , 1992 .

[8]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Tests of opioid deficiency hypotheses of alcoholism. , 1991, Alcohol.

[9]  M. Kalsher,et al.  Morphine increases intake of beer among rats. , 1991, Alcohol.

[10]  S. D. Glick,et al.  Alcohol preference and hepatic alcohol dehydrogenase activity in adult Long-Evans rats is affected by intrauterine sibling contiguity. , 1991, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[11]  N. S. Miller Comprehensive handbook of drug and alcohol addiction , 1991 .

[12]  W. Kromer Regulation of Intestinal Motility by Peripheral Opioids: Facts and Hypotheses , 1991 .

[13]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Opioids Modulate Rats’ Intakes of Alcoholic Beverages , 1990 .

[14]  A. Alterman,et al.  Naltrexone and the Treatment of Alcohol-Dependence: Initial Observations , 1990 .

[15]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Modulation of ethanol-intake by morphine: evidence for a central site of action. , 1990, Life sciences.

[16]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Chronically administered morphine, circadian cyclicity, and intake of an alcoholic beverage. , 1990, Alcohol.

[17]  M. Linseman Central vs. peripheral mediation of opioid effects on alcohol consumption in free-feeding rats , 1989, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.

[18]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Constant infusions of morphine and intakes of sweetened ethanol solution among rats. , 1988, Alcohol.

[19]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Small doses of morphine enhance voluntary intake of a solution of only ethanol and water , 1988 .

[20]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Further studies of opioids and intake of sweetened alcoholic beverage. , 1988, Alcohol.

[21]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Persistence and specificity of small doses of morphine on intake of alcoholic beverages. , 1987, Alcohol.

[22]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Selected opioids modify intake of sweetened ethanol solution among female rats. , 1987, Alcohol.

[23]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Morphine and diprenorphine together potentiate intake of alcoholic beverages. , 1987, Alcohol.

[24]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Methadone, pentobarbital, pimozide and ethanol-intake. , 1986, Alcohol.

[25]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Consumption of ethanol solution is potentiated by morphine and attenuated by naloxone persistently across repeated daily administrations. , 1986, Alcohol.

[26]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Endogenous opioid peptides and regulation of drinking and feeding. , 1985, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[27]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Selected opioids, ethanol and intake of ethanol. , 1984, Alcohol.

[28]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Opioids, benzodiazepines and intake of ethanol. , 1984, Alcohol.

[29]  L. D. Reid,et al.  Morphine and naloxone modulate intake of ethanol. , 1984, Alcohol.

[30]  J. Sinclair Morphine suppresses alcohol drinking regardless of prior alcohol access duration. , 1974, Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior.

[31]  J. Sinclair,et al.  Morphine-induced Suppression of Voluntary Alcohol Drinking in Rats , 1973, Nature.

[32]  H. Kalant Absorption, Diffusion, Distribution, and Elimination of Ethanol: Effects on Biological Membranes , 1971 .