Behavioural Pharmacology 2013-09-01

Rate-dependent effects of monoamine releasers on intracranial self-stimulation in rats: implications for abuse liability assessment.

Clayton T Bauer, Matthew L Banks, Bruce E Blough, S Stevens Negus

Index: Behav. Pharmacol. 24(5-6) , 448-58, (2013)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

'Rate dependency' in the discipline of behavioral pharmacology describes a phenomenon wherein the effect of a drug on the rate of a behavior varies systematically as a function of the baseline, predrug rate of that behavior. Historically, rate-dependency studies have compared drug effects on different baseline rates of behavior maintained either by different schedules of reinforcement or during sequential segments of a fixed-interval schedule. The current experiment generated different baseline rates of behavior by altering frequency of electrical stimulation in an intracranial self-stimulation assay. Amphetamine and 10 other monoamine releasers were analyzed for their ability to produce rate-dependent effects in this assay. There were three main findings. First, all compounds produced rate-dependent effects at some dose. Second, one parameter of rate-dependency plots (peak Y-intercept of the regression line) correlated with in-vitro neurochemical data on selectivity of these compounds to release dopamine versus serotonin (P<0.025, R=0.50). Lastly, a correlation between peak Y-intercept and breakpoints under a progressive-ratio procedure in nonhuman primates was also significant (P<0.05, R=0.64). Overall, these results extend the rate-dependent effects of monoamine releasers to behavior maintained under intracranial self-stimulation and suggest that, at least for monoamine releasers, the Y-intercept parameter of rate-dependency plots might be a useful metric of drug reward and predictor of drug self-administration measures of drug reinforcement.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

[Tumors of the liver secondary to androgen therapy. Apropos of 2 cases in children].

1987-01-01

[Chir. Pediatr. 28(2) , 97-101, (1987)]

Heart lesions associated with anabolic steroid abuse: comparison of post-mortem findings in athletes and norethandrolone-induced lesions in rabbits.

2009-07-01

[Exp. Toxicol. Pathol. 61(4) , 317-23, (2009)]

In vitro study methodologies to investigate genetic aspects and effects of drugs used in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

2013-01-01

[J. Neural Transm. Gen. Sect. 120(1) , 131-9, (2013)]

Hepatic tumours during androgen therapy in Fanconi anaemia.

1993-08-01

[Eur. J. Pediatr. 152(8) , 691-3, (1993)]

[Effects of weakly androgenic anabolic steroids on growth in Turner's syndrome].

1985-04-01

[Arch. Fr. Pediatr. 42(4) , 265-71, (1985)]

More Articles...