ABSTRACT
Nucleotides, nucleosides, and purine bases were extracted from human endomyocardial biopsies, freeze-clamped rat hearts, and porcine coronary sinus plasma. Perchloric acid extracts were neutralized with Freon-trioctylamine and analyzed at 250 nm by reverse-phase ion-pairing high-performance liquid chromatography. To achieve the sensitivity necessary for analyzing small (1-3 mg wet wt) tissue samples, a small-bore, 2.1-mm-internal-diameter, C18, 5-micron reverse-phase column and a flow rate of 0.2 ml/min were used. All of the myocardial nucleotides and AMP degradation products were resolved in a total separation time of 27 min with 30 mM KH2PO4, 7.5 mM tetrabutylammonium phosphate buffers, and binary pH and acetonitrile gradients.
Subject(s)
Myocardium/analysis , Nucleosides/isolation & purification , Nucleotides/isolation & purification , Purines/isolation & purification , Animals , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Rats , SwineABSTRACT
The effects of morphine and its derivatives on self-stimulation behavior have been widely studied. In those experiments which have used multiple injections (over days) and multiple post-injection tests (within days), the typical findings includes a depression of responding after the initial injections followed by a facilitation of responding on subsequent days. There have been only a few reports which have tested the effects of methadone in this paradigm. Some investigators have observed only depression of self-stimulation while others have reported both the transient depression and the subsequent facilitation generally obtained with morphine. In the present experiment we administered either 5 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg methadone IP over a five day period and tested MFB-LH self-stimulation at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 23 hours post-injection. Compared to saline controls, the 10 mg/kg dose produced the typical opiate-induced changes in self-stimulation, i.e., an initial depression which lasted for two hours on the first two days but was replaced by significant facilitation by hour 4 of day 3. This facilitation persisted for at least 10 hours on all 5 days of the experiment. Except for a transient (days 2-3) depression of self-stimulation, 5 mg/kg was without effects. The present experiment demonstrates that methadone does facilitate self-stimulation but that its ability to do so is highly dose-dependent.