In the present research, levels of gentamicin (GM) in serum and carrageenan pleural exudate from the rat have been compared, using three evaluation methods: microbiological assay (MA), enzyme-immunoassay (EMIT) and fluorescence-immunoassay (TDX). In a first study, the evaluations carried out by MA and EMIT have furnished comparable data in serum, while statistically significant differences were verified at all times in pleural exudate. On the contrary, in a second study, while the evaluations carried out by MA and EMIT, at all times and in both biological fluids, have produced similar data, the evaluation carried out by TDX consistently supplied higher results, with statistically significant differences at some times (5 min and 60 min for serum, 30 min and 60 min for exudate). Some possible interpretations of these results are discussed.
Tolerance to the rewarding properties of morphine was investigated in mice using a new conditioned place preference (CPP) procedure. Four pairings of morphine with specific environmental cues induced a significant CPP for the drug-paired cues. Further opiate conditioning trials in the presence of the same environmental cues revealed no change in the drug-induced CPP on repeated test sessions. Subsequent exposure of the same animals to conditioning trials by pairing morphine with a set of novel environmental cues showed that the opiate was still able to produce a CPP in mice treated with a total of 16 morphine injections. The present CPP paradigm may prove useful to investigate tolerance to the rewarding properties of drugs of abuse.
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