Evidence for an analgesic interaction between delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9 -THC) and morphine was sought using an experimental pain model applied to normal volunteers. The study incorporated a double blinded, four treatment, four period, four sequence, crossover design. Subjects received Δ9 -THC 5 mg orally or placebo and 90 min later morphine 0.02 mg/kg intravenously or placebo. Fifteen minutes later subjects rated the pain associated with the application of thermal stimuli to skin using two visual analog scales, one for the sensory and one for the affective aspects of pain. Among sensory responses, neither morphine nor Δ9 -THC had a significant effect at the doses used, and there was no significant interaction between the two. Among affective responses, although neither morphine nor Δ9 -THC had a significant effect, there was a positive analgesic interaction between the two (p= 0.012), indicating that the combination had a synergistic affective analgesic effect. The surprisingly limited reported experimental experience in humans does not support a role for Δ9 -THC as an analgesic or as an adjunct to cannabinoid analgesia, except for our finding of synergy limited to the affective component of pain. Comparison of our results with those of others suggests that extrapolation from experimental pain models to the clinic is not likely to be a straight-forward process. Future studies of Δ9 -THC or other cannabinoids in combination with opiates should focus upon clinical rather than experimental pain. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.