Iwamoto E T
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1986;89(2):221-9. doi: 10.1007/BF00310633.
The effects of phencyclidine (PCP) on locomotor activity were compared to those of the stereoisomers of N-allylnormetazocine (NAN) after acute administration to rats. PCP produced swaying and falling movements, increased sniffing behavior, and enhanced horizontal locomotor activity. d-NAN also induced swaying, falling, sniffing behavior and locomotion, and decreased rearing behavior. l-NAN decreased rearing activity, depressed locomotion, antagonized morphine antinociception and precipitated the morphine-withdrawal syndrome. Sensitization to drug-induced sniffing, rearing and locomotion developed after four daily injections of PCP, d-NAN or l-NAN in rats. Rats which were sensitized to PCP-induced locomotion, sniffing, and rearing were also cross-sensitized to both d-NAN and l-NAN. Animals sensitized to the effects of either d- or l-NAN exhibited cross-sensitization to PCP. There was little evidence that the cross-sensitization between the three agents was stereoselective. These data indicate that the acute effects of PCP are similar to those of d-NAN, but differ from l-NAN, the only agent of the three with opioid antagonist properties. The data further indicate that as sensitization to the motor effects develops during repeated administration of PCP, d-NAN or l-NAN, the differences among the three agents become less apparent.