Literature DB >> 10379625

Effects of acute and repeated dose administration of caffeine and pentoxifylline on diazepam-induced mouse behavior in the hole-board test.

V S Rao1, F A Santos, W G Paula, R M Silva, A R Campos.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: The behavioral effects of methyl xanthines and their interactions with benzodiazepines have not been clearly established in animal models of anxiety.
OBJECTIVE: The present study extended the previous studies to determine the effects of acute and repeated administration of caffeine, a non-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor and pentoxyfylline, a specific type-4 phosphodiesterase (PDE4) inhibitor on (1) baseline anxiety-like behavior and (2) the response to an acute challenge with diazepam on anxiety-like behavior in the hole-board test.
METHODS: Mice were observed for the number of head-dips they made into the holes of the hole-board apparatus during a 5-min period, starting 30 min after acute (20 mg/kg) and repeated oral dose (20 mg/kg, twice a day for 4 days) administration of caffeine and pentoxifylline. In separate experiments, the response to an acute challenge with graded doses of diazepam (0.375 3 mg/kg, SC) was observed in naive mice or mice on acute and repeated dose regimen with methyl xanthines.
RESULTS: Mice on acute but not after repeated dose regimen demonstrated a significantly increased number of hole-dips, indicating an anxiolytic-like effect of methylxanthines. Diazepam at the lower doses (0.375 and 0.75 mg/kg) but not at the highest doses (1.5 and 3 mg/kg) examined produced a significant anxiolytic-like effect. After an acute dose exposure of mice to caffeine and pentoxifylline, a rightward shift in the dose-response curve of diazepam was observed and particularly at 1.5 mg/kg dose, the net effect of diazepam was significantly enhanced which was, however, impaired upon repeated administration, more so with caffeine than with pentoxifylline.
CONCLUSIONS: It is concluded that the xanthine drugs exert anxiolytic-like activity similar to diazepam in the hole-board test. In addition, they seem to modulate the anxiolytic effects of diazepam after both acute and repeated administration, probably as a result of an endogenous adenosinergic mechanism which may have therapeutic significance.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10379625     DOI: 10.1007/s002130050977

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


  2 in total

Review 1.  The cyclic AMP phenotype of fragile X and autism.

Authors:  Daniel J Kelley; Anita Bhattacharyya; Garet P Lahvis; Jerry C P Yin; Jim Malter; Richard J Davidson
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2008-06-17       Impact factor: 8.989

Review 2.  A reverse-translational approach to bipolar disorder: rodent and human studies in the Behavioral Pattern Monitor.

Authors:  Jared W Young; Arpi Minassian; Martin P Paulus; Mark A Geyer; William Perry
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2007-06-05       Impact factor: 8.989

  2 in total

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