pubmed:abstractText |
The influence of the oral administration of different doses of citalopram (5, 15 and 45 mg/kg), imipramine (15, 30, 45 and 60 mg/kg), nortriptyline (15, 45 and 60 mg/kg) and amineptine (45 mg/kg) on stress-induced analgesia has been studied in anaesthetized rats. None of the administered antidepressants seem to have appreciable analgesic activity when analgesia is tested by the tail-immersion method. Citalopram, imipramine and nortriptyline, but not amineptine, increase the analgesia induced by inescapable footshock delivered continuously for 2 min to rats. Citalopram is the most potent drug. Our results support the suggested importance of 5-HT and noradrenaline terminals, but not those of dopamine, in the mediation of the stress-induced analgesia and seem to support the hypothesis that the analgesic activity of antidepressants is partially related to their modulating effects on the endogenously released opioid peptides involved in the endogenous pain inhibitory systems.
|