%0 Journal Article %T The effects of morphine and nicotine co-administration on body weight, food intake and appetite-regulating peptides in rats %J Iranian Journal of Veterinary Research %I Shiraz University %Z 1728-1997 %A Rezvanipour, M. %A Esmaeili-Mahani, S. %A Siahposht, A. %A Rezvanipour, S. %D 2011 %\ 03/01/2011 %V 12 %N 1 %P 16-23 %! The effects of morphine and nicotine co-administration on body weight, food intake and appetite-regulating peptides in rats %K Nicotine %K morphine %K Feeding behavior %K NPY %K Leptin %R 10.22099/ijvr.2011.36 %X Previous studies in humans and animals have reported that nicotine administration decreases body weightand caloric intake. Opiate and cigarette have been used concomitantly as drug abuse. The aim of the present study was, therefore, to analyze the effect of chronic co-administration of nicotine and morphine on food intake, body weight and on some feeding-associated peptides. All experiments were carried out on male Wistar rats. Animals were randomly assigned to the free-fed and pair-fed control groups, nicotine- andmorphine-treated and nicotine plus morphine groups. Morphine sulfate (20 mg/kg for 14 days s.c.) andnicotine (4 mg/kg for 14 days i.p.) were injected to the rats. The serum levels of leptin and neuropeptide Y(NPY) were measured by enzyme immunosorbant assay and radioimmunoassay, respectively. The resultsshowed that nicotine had a greater suppressing effect on total food intake than morphine alone or nicotineplus morphine. Furthermore, chronic injection of nicotine significantly decreased body weight as comparedwith before injection, while body weight changes were not observed in morphine-treated rats. The mean bodyweight in the morphine-treated rats was lower than that in the free-fed control animals. The serum level ofNPY was decreased just in the nicotine-injected group. A significant decrease in leptin levels was observedin the drug treated and pair-fed groups. In conclusion, morphine modulates the decreasing effect of nicotineon food intake, and it seems that the mechanism underlying the attenuating effects of morphine on thenicotine effects involves mediation, at least in part, by preventing the effect of nicotine on NPY levels. %U https://ijvr.shirazu.ac.ir/article_36_d0c4d5b2677e8e8907f918c327fb648d.pdf