Abstract
1 The spontaneous release of acetylcholine (ACh) from the cerebral cortex of control and morphine-dependent rats was investigated. The rate of resting output of ACh in morphine-dependent animals was lower than that in the control animals.2 Administration of naloxone and nalorphine to morphine-dependent rats was followed by a significant rise in the release of cortical ACh. In control rats no such increase in the release of ACh occurred after similar injections of narcotic antagonists.3 Injections of morphine produced a consistent decrease in the rate of spontaneous release of cortical ACh in the control rats, but similar injections in the dependent rats did not produce a decrease in the rate of cortical ACh release.4 The relevance of these results with regard to development of the narcotic abstinence syndrome is discussed.