| Literature DB >> 6139825 |
Abstract
Rats were injected systemically with different classes of gabergic agent in order to investigate gabergic involvement in limbic output. Agonists differed one from another in their effects on variable-interval self-stimulation: clonazepam (in repeatedly-tested rats), chlordiazepoxide and pentobarbitone had a strongly biphasic action, low doses being facilitatory and high doses depressant, whereas other agonists including valproate and 3-APS (homotaurine) were uniformly depressant. The facilitatory effects of the benzodiazepines were dramatically enhanced by GABA antagonists (picrotoxin or pentylenetetrazol) even though antagonists on their own produced a dose-dependent depression that was not reversible by other anticonvulsant drugs. Ventral tegmental electrode placements yielded generally similar results. Depression of self-stimulation observed on initial exposure to clonazepam was reversed by repeated self-stimulation testing in the drugged state but not by repeated daily injections without testing. Locomotor activity (under conflict-free conditions) was unaffected or was depressed both by agonists and by antagonists. Thus, the facilitation of self-stimulation by chlordiazepoxide, pentobarbitone and clonazepam appears to be accounted for in terms of non-gabergic anti-conflict activity by these agents. Self-stimulation and locomotor changes following systemic administration did not disclose facilitatory effects attributable to gabergic efferents from limbic dopamine areas.Entities:
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Year: 1983 PMID: 6139825 DOI: 10.1016/0091-3057(83)90338-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Biochem Behav ISSN: 0091-3057 Impact factor: 3.533