Literature DB >> 7796109

Influence of novel versus home environments on sensitization to the psychomotor stimulant effects of cocaine and amphetamine.

A Badiani1, K E Browman, T E Robinson.   

Abstract

The acute psychomotor response (rotational behavior in rats with a unilateral 6-OHDA lesion), and the development of sensitization, were studied in rats that received seven consecutive daily injections of amphetamine (Experiment 1) or cocaine (Experiment 2) either at home or in a 'novel' test environment. The home (HOME) and novel (NOVEL) cages were physically identical, but one group lived and was tested in these cages, whereas the rats in the other group were transported from the stainless steel hanging cages where they lived, to those NOVEl test cages, for each test session. In Exp. 1, the acute psychomotor response to 3.0 mg/kg of amphetamine i.p. and the development of sensitization (increase in the rotational response between the first and the the seventh test session) were greater in the NOVEL than in the HOME environment. In Expt. 2, there were no significant group differences in the acute response to 20 mg/kg of cocaine i.p., but the animals tested in the NOVEL environment showed greater sensitization than animals tested in the HOME environment. In addition, the animals pretreated with cocaine in the NOVEL environment, but not those pretreated with cocaine in the HOME environment, showed conditioned rotational behavior in response to an injection of saline. These data indicate that: (i) sensitization to the psychomotor activating effects of both amphetamine and cocaine is enhanced in a NOVEL environment; (ii) this phenomenon appears to the independent of the effects of the NOVEL environment on the acute response to these drugs; (iii) a robust conditioned psychomotor response to contextual cues develops only when cocaine treatments are given in the NOVEL test environment.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7796109     DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(95)00028-o

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  51 in total

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2.  Brain temperature change and movement activation induced by intravenous cocaine delivered at various injection speeds in rats.

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4.  Does context influence the duration of locomotor sensitization to ethanol in female DBA/2J mice?

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Review 5.  Basal ganglia circuit loops, dopamine and motivation: A review and enquiry.

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6.  Localization of genes mediating acute and sensitized locomotor responses to cocaine in BXD/Ty recombinant inbred mice.

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7.  Associational and nonassociational mechanisms in locomotor sensitization to the dopamine agonist quinpirole.

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8.  H3 receptor blockade by thioperamide enhances cognition in rats without inducing locomotor sensitization.

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9.  Amphetamine activation of hippocampal drive of mesolimbic dopamine neurons: a mechanism of behavioral sensitization.

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10.  Bilateral six-hydroxydopamine administration to PFC prevents the expression of behavioral sensitization to methylphenidate.

Authors:  S J Wanchoo; M J Lee; A C Swann; N Dafny
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2009-11-22       Impact factor: 3.252

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