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S Steindorf

1 paper in the library · 195 citations · publishing 1991

Papers

Effects and aftereffects of ibogaine on morphine self-administration in rats.

European journal of pharmacology April 3, 1991 S D Glick, K Rossman, S Steindorf et al. 195 citations

Ibogaine, a naturally occurring alkaloid, reduced intravenous morphine self-administration in rats. The drug caused an acute decrease in morphine intake in the hour after treatment, but this was linked to abnormal motor behavior (whole body tremors). A more notable aftereffect occurred a day later, when ibogaine should have been fully eliminated from the body and no obvious signs of exposure remained. Some rats showed a persistent decrease in morphine intake for days or weeks after a single injection; others required two or three weekly injections before showing such changes, and a few rats were resistant to prolonged aftereffects. The aftereffect was not due to conditioned aversion. Ibogaine also acutely suppressed bar-pressing for water but showed no aftereffect on that behavior, suggesting some specificity for morphine reinforcement.