RESUMEN
Previous studies have concluded that (a) electrical stimulation in the periaqueductal gray/dorsal raphe nucleus (PAG/DRN) region specifically produces either non-opiate or opiate forms of antinociception dependent upon the dorsoventral level of stimulation and (b) the 'opiate' form of stimulation-produced analgesia (SPA) arising from the ventral PAG/DRN region shows cross-tolerance with opiate forms of footshock analgesia, implying common neural substrates. This latter conclusion in turn implies that SPA elicited from the ventral PAG/DRN region would be expected to be antagonized by scopolamine, since this muscarinic cholinergic antagonist blocks opiate footshock analgesia. The present study demonstrates instead that neither 10 mg/kg naloxone nor 10 mg/kg scopolamine had any effect on SPA elicited from sites histologically verified to lie within the presumptive 'opiate' ventral PAG/DRN region. These data bring into question both the site specificity of opiate SPA and the common mediation of ventral PAG/DRN SPA and opiate forms of footshock analgesia.