Quenten Highgate1, Susan Schenk2. 1. School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand. 2. School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand. susan.schenk@vuw.ac.nz.
Abstract
RATIONALE: 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) preferentially increases synaptic serotonin (5HT). This response was attenuated following repeated exposure but there was recovery as a result of abstinence. Effects of abstinence on self-administration of many drugs have been documented but the impact on MDMA self-administration is unknown. OBJECTIVE: This study compared the effects of abstinence on MDMA and cocaine self-administration. METHODS: Six-hour daily MDMA or cocaine sessions were conducted until a total of 350 mg/kg had been self-administered. Following this, rats were randomly assigned to either a 0- or 14-day abstinence group. Self-administration testing then continued for an additional 7 days. RESULTS: The latency to self-administer 350 mg/kg was shorter for rats that self-administered cocaine. The temporal distribution of responding within each test session also differed; MDMA self-administration was high during the first hour of each session, and decreased during subsequent hours, whereas cocaine self-administration was evenly distributed throughout each hour of the session. Abstinence decreased MDMA but not cocaine self-administration. CONCLUSIONS: The selective reduction of MDMA self-administration following abstinence is consistent with the idea that MDMA-stimulated 5-HT release is inhibitory to MDMA self-administration.
RATIONALE: 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) preferentially increases synaptic serotonin (5HT). This response was attenuated following repeated exposure but there was recovery as a result of abstinence. Effects of abstinence on self-administration of many drugs have been documented but the impact on MDMA self-administration is unknown. OBJECTIVE: This study compared the effects of abstinence on MDMA and cocaine self-administration. METHODS: Six-hour daily MDMA or cocaine sessions were conducted until a total of 350 mg/kg had been self-administered. Following this, rats were randomly assigned to either a 0- or 14-day abstinence group. Self-administration testing then continued for an additional 7 days. RESULTS: The latency to self-administer 350 mg/kg was shorter for rats that self-administered cocaine. The temporal distribution of responding within each test session also differed; MDMA self-administration was high during the first hour of each session, and decreased during subsequent hours, whereas cocaine self-administration was evenly distributed throughout each hour of the session. Abstinence decreased MDMA but not cocaine self-administration. CONCLUSIONS: The selective reduction of MDMA self-administration following abstinence is consistent with the idea that MDMA-stimulated 5-HT release is inhibitory to MDMA self-administration.
Authors: Robert W Gould; H Donald Gage; Matthew L Banks; Brandi L Blaylock; Paul W Czoty; Michael A Nader Journal: Neuropharmacology Date: 2011-04-17 Impact factor: 5.250
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