Literature DB >> 19513699

Effects of self-administered cocaine in adolescent and adult male rats on orbitofrontal cortex-related neurocognitive functioning.

Roxann C Harvey1, Kimberly A Dembro, Kiran Rajagopalan, Michael M Mutebi, Kathleen M Kantak.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Deficits in amygdala-related stimulus-reward learning are produced following 18 drug-free days of cocaine self-administration or its passive delivery in rats exposed during adulthood. No deficits in stimulus-reward learning are produced by cocaine exposure initiated during adolescence.
OBJECTIVES: To determine if age of initiating cocaine exposure differentially affects behavioral functioning of an additional memory system linked to cocaine addiction, the orbitofrontal cortex.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A yoked-triad design (n = 8) was used. One rat controlled cocaine delivery and the other two passively received cocaine or saline. Rats controlling drug delivery (1.0 mg/kg) self-administered cocaine from either P37-P59 or P77-P99, and then underwent 18 drug-free days (P60-P77 vs. P100-P117). Rats next were tested for acquisition of odor-delayed win-shift behavior conducted over 15 sessions (P78-P96 vs. P118-P136).
RESULTS: Cocaine self-administration did not differ between adults and adolescents. During the test phase of the odor-delayed win-shift task (relatively difficult task demands), rats from both drug-onset ages showed learning deficits. Rats with cocaine self-administration experience committed more errors and had longer session latencies compared to rats passively receiving saline or cocaine. Rats with adolescent-onset cocaine self-administration experience showed an additional learning deficit by requiring more sessions to reach criterion levels for task acquisition compared to same-aged passive saline controls or rats with adult-onset cocaine self-administration experience. Rats passively receiving cocaine did not differ from the passive saline control from either age group.
CONCLUSIONS: Rats with adolescent-onset cocaine self-administration experience were more impaired in an orbitofrontal cortex-related learning task than rats with adult-onset cocaine self-administration experience.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19513699      PMCID: PMC2902997          DOI: 10.1007/s00213-009-1579-3

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


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