Everlasting Reign
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2009
- Messages
- 75
There are several commonly used laboratory animals on which opioid potency is tested, the most common being the rat and mouse, and also a further variety of different tests and sub-tests performed on these test animals, such as the mouse hot plate test, the rat tail flick test, the writhing test, etc.
Is there a general rule or consensus that one or more of these methods gives a best approximation of analgesic potency in humans? Such tests performed on the rat seems to give a uniformly higher rating of potency than those on the mouse, e.g. the potency of fentanyl in the rat according to some tests is around 250x morphine, but tests in the mouse seem to return values closer to the generally accepted potency of fentanyl in man, approx. 80-100x morphine.
Is there a general rule or consensus that one or more of these methods gives a best approximation of analgesic potency in humans? Such tests performed on the rat seems to give a uniformly higher rating of potency than those on the mouse, e.g. the potency of fentanyl in the rat according to some tests is around 250x morphine, but tests in the mouse seem to return values closer to the generally accepted potency of fentanyl in man, approx. 80-100x morphine.
