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Abstract
Background and Purpose: This study sought to determine whether cannabidiol (CBD) or a CBD derivative, CBD monovalinate monohemisuccinate (CBD-val-HS), could attenuate the development of oxycodone reward while retaining its analgesic effects.
Experimental Approach: To determine the effect on oxycodone reward, animals were enrolled in the conditioned place preference paradigm and received either saline or oxycodone (3.0 mg/kg) in combination with either CBD or CBD-val-HS utilizing three sets of drug-/no drug-conditioning trials. To determine if the doses of CBD or CBD-val-HS that blocked opioid reward would affect nociceptive processes, animals were enrolled in the hot plate and abdominal writhing assays when administered alone or in combination with a subanalgesic (1.0 mg/kg) or analgesic (3.0 mg/kg) dose of oxycodone.
Key Results: Results from condition place preference demonstrated CBD was not able attenuate oxycodone place preference while CBD-val-HS attenuated these rewarding effects at 8.0 mg/kg and was void of rewarding or aversive properties. In contrast to CBD, CBD-val-HS alone produced analgesic effects in both nociceptive assays but was most effective compared with oxycodone against thermal nociception. Of interest, there was a differential interaction of CBD and CBD-val-HS×oxycodone across the two nociceptive assays producing subadditive responses on the hot plate assay, whereas additive responses were observed in the abdominal writhing assay.
Conclusion: These findings suggest CBD-val-HS alone, a nonrewarding analgesic compound, could be useful in pain management and addiction treatment settings.