| Literature DB >> 17696683 |
Stanley J Weiss1, David N Kearns, Chesley J Christensen, Mary E Huntsberry, Charles W Schindler, Leigh V Panlilio.
Abstract
Environmental stimuli can exert a powerful influence over drug seeking and taking. For example, previous experiments found that combining multiple drug-related stimuli tripled drug seeking and doubled drug intake (L. V. Panlilio, S. J. Weiss, & C. W. Schindler, 1996, 2000), whereas a signal for the absence of cocaine (i.e., a drug-related inhibitor) dramatically reduced cocaine seeking in rats by over 90% (D. N. Kearns, S. J. Weiss, C. W. Schindler, & L. V. Panlilio, 2005). In the present experiment, a signal for the absence of food created through the A+/AB- conditioned inhibition paradigm also suppressed responding for cocaine by approximately 90%. Symmetrically, a signal for the absence of cocaine (i.e., a cocaine-based inhibitor) suppressed food seeking to a similar degree. These findings, consistent with the appetitive-aversive interaction theory of motivation, suggest that using inhibitors based on nondrug appetitive reinforcers might be a practical method of reducing drug seeking in human drug abusers and should be seriously considered for clinical test and application.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17696683 DOI: 10.1037/1064-1297.15.4.359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Clin Psychopharmacol ISSN: 1064-1297 Impact factor: 3.157