Sensitization of Stereotyped Behavior to Amphetamine Is Context and Response Dependent
Autor: | John J Battisti, Lane J. Wallace, Norman J. Uretsky, Cheng-Huan Chang |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
Male
Dextroamphetamine Time Factors Ratón Clinical Biochemistry Drug Resistance Context (language use) Pharmacology Toxicology Biochemistry Mice Behavioral Neuroscience medicine Animals Amphetamine Biological Psychiatry Sensitization ED50 Dose-Response Relationship Drug Classical conditioning Stereotypy (non-human) medicine.anatomical_structure Toxicity Central Nervous System Stimulants Stereotyped Behavior Psychology medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 63:263-269 |
ISSN: | 0091-3057 |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0091-3057(98)00259-7 |
Popis: | The present study was designed to determine whether the environmental context in which amphetamine is administered plays a role in the development of sensitization to the stereotyped behavioral effects of amphetamine in mice. In male CF-1 mice, the dose-response curve for stereotyped behavior elicited by amphetamine was shifted 1.9-fold to the left 48 h after pretreatment with 14 mg/kg amphetamine. Behavioral sensitization only developed in mice that were pretreated in the same or a similar environment as that of the test environment. In addition, when mice were placed in an environment that attenuated the acute expression of stereotyped behavior elicited by the pretreatment dose of amphetamine, sensitization never developed. A further experiment showed that 96% of the mice that expressed stereotypy after the ED50 pretreatment dose of 10 mg/kg amphetamine showed a stereotyped behavioral response to the lesser dose of 7 mg/kg 48 h later, indicating sensitization. In contrast, mice that did not express stereotypy after the ED50 dose of amphetamine failed to show a significant stereotyped behavioral response to amphetamine challenge compared to vehicle-pretreated controls. Therefore, the results indicate that preexposure to a single high dose of amphetamine produces context- and response-dependent sensitization to amphetamine-induced stereotyped behavior. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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