Literature DB >> 20600437

Changes in metabolic-related variables during chronic morphine treatment.

Szilamér Ferenczi1, Cristina Núñez, Bernadett Pintér-Kübler, Anna Földes, Fátima Martín, Vera Ladnyánszky Márkus, M Victoria Milanés, Krisztina J Kovács.   

Abstract

To reveal neuroendocrine/neurochemical changes that are responsible for the robust metabolic alterations seen during chronic morphine treatment we followed hormonal-, transcriptional- and behavioral changes during chronic morphine administration in adult male Wistar rats. Animals were implanted with increasing amount of slow release morphine tablets for 8 days. Morphine treated animals gain significantly less weight than placebo implanted controls. This weight loss is due to the dramatic decrease in the food intake and caloric efficiency in the first days of drug administration and to the lasting disregulated feeding pattern. Changes in feeding behavior included increase of diurnal and decrease of nocturnal feeding frequency in morphine treated rats. Significantly less leptin and insulin plasma levels were detected in morphine implanted animals than in placebo implanted controls, while adiponectin and ACTH concentration remain unchanged. Morphine treated rats display an increase of FosB/Delta FosB immunoreactivity at brain sites that have been implicated regulation of food intake and energy expenditure, including hypothalamic arcuate, paraventricular and ventromedial nuclei and in the lateral hypothalamic area as well as in the caudal brainstem. However, morphine-induced long-term metabolic alterations were not accompanied with any significant changes in the expression of anorexigenic neuropeptides POMC and CART in the hypothalamus and in the brainstem. The disregulated feeding pattern was not reflected in changes of orexin transcription, however, a compensatory upregulation was revealed in hypothalamic NPY expression. (c) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20600437     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuint.2010.06.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurochem Int        ISSN: 0197-0186            Impact factor:   3.921


  10 in total

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Authors:  Bernadett Pintér-Kübler; Szilamér Ferenczi; Cristina Núnez; Edina Zelei; Agnes Polyák; M Victoria Milanés; Krisztina J Kovács
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  10 in total

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