I figured this would be the sub-forum to post this, sorry if I was wrong 
So basically it's something of a commonplace that drugs that act as agonists at certain receptor sites cause a long-term effect of downregulation thereby effecting a rebound tolerance and/or withdrawal (not necessarily though). Same goes with antagonists apart from the fact that the key process is upregulation. Without going too much further into detail that you folks surely know lots better than I do, I just figured that u-opioid agonism, notorious for its huge capacity of creating dependency where it involves taking exogenous agents, can in itself be produced as a rebound effect secondary to an antagonist's action.
u-opioid receptors seem to up and downregulate within hours and days, giving way to heroin withdrawal taking a couple to a few days to subside. I believe a selective u-opioid antagonist (anybody can suggest one? Naloxone is not selective I hear) that would feel to a 'healthy' individual much the way heroin withdrawal feels to an addict might produce the opioid tolerance in reverse, upregulating u-receptors with each dose. Of course that would require much struggling each time due to the drug's supposed profoundly unpleasant effects. However, imagine somebody taking increasing dosages of a u-opioid antagonist over the course of a week then to discontinue it to experience an ongoing opioid high without any agonist whatsoever, entirely due to the upregulated state of one's receptors after the repeated antagonist administration. That strikes me as a valid method, inherently free of any risk of addiction since the CNS never gets to learn the link between a euphoria-inducing substance and the consecutive euphoric state.
I'm longing to know what you people think of this!
So basically it's something of a commonplace that drugs that act as agonists at certain receptor sites cause a long-term effect of downregulation thereby effecting a rebound tolerance and/or withdrawal (not necessarily though). Same goes with antagonists apart from the fact that the key process is upregulation. Without going too much further into detail that you folks surely know lots better than I do, I just figured that u-opioid agonism, notorious for its huge capacity of creating dependency where it involves taking exogenous agents, can in itself be produced as a rebound effect secondary to an antagonist's action.
u-opioid receptors seem to up and downregulate within hours and days, giving way to heroin withdrawal taking a couple to a few days to subside. I believe a selective u-opioid antagonist (anybody can suggest one? Naloxone is not selective I hear) that would feel to a 'healthy' individual much the way heroin withdrawal feels to an addict might produce the opioid tolerance in reverse, upregulating u-receptors with each dose. Of course that would require much struggling each time due to the drug's supposed profoundly unpleasant effects. However, imagine somebody taking increasing dosages of a u-opioid antagonist over the course of a week then to discontinue it to experience an ongoing opioid high without any agonist whatsoever, entirely due to the upregulated state of one's receptors after the repeated antagonist administration. That strikes me as a valid method, inherently free of any risk of addiction since the CNS never gets to learn the link between a euphoria-inducing substance and the consecutive euphoric state.
I'm longing to know what you people think of this!
