Schwartzer Jared J, Connor Daniel F, Morrison Randall L, Ricci Lesley A, Melloni Richard H
Program in Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, 125 Nightingale Hall, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, United States.
Physiol Behav. 2008 Sep 3;95(1-2):176-81. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.05.015. Epub 2008 Jul 9.
Risperidone has been shown to be clinically effective for the treatment of aggressive behavior in children, yet until recently no information was available regarding whether risperidone exhibits aggression-specific suppression in preclinical studies employing validated developmentally immature animal models of escalated aggression. Recently, using a pharmacologic animal model of escalated offensive aggression, we reported that acute risperidone treatment selectively and dose-dependently reduces the expression of the adult aggressive phenotype, with a significant reduction in aggressive responses observed at 0.1 mg/kg, i.e., a dose within the range administered to children and adolescents in the clinical setting. This study examined whether repeated exposure to risperidone during puberty would prevent the generation of the highly escalated aggressive phenotype in this animal model. To test this hypothesis, the aggression-eliciting stimulus (i.e., cocaine hydrochloride, 0.5 mg/kg/dayx28 days) was co-administered with an aggression-suppressing dose of risperidone (i.e., 0.1 mg/kg/day) during different time frames of puberty and for varied lengths of time (i.e., 1-4 weeks), and then animals were scored for targeted measures of offensive aggression during late puberty. Risperidone administration prevented the generation of the adult aggressive phenotype, with a complete blockade of matured offensive responses (i.e., lateral attacks and flank/rump bites) seen only after prolonged periods of exposure to risperidone (i.e., 3-4 weeks). The selective prevention of these aggressive responses, while leaving other measures of aggression intact (e.g., upright offensive postures), suggest that risperidone is acting in a highly discriminatory anti-aggressive fashion, targeting neurobehavioral elements important for the mature aggressive response pattern.
利培酮已被证明在治疗儿童攻击性行为方面具有临床疗效,但直到最近,在使用经过验证的发育不成熟的动物攻击升级模型的临床前研究中,仍没有关于利培酮是否表现出针对攻击行为的特异性抑制作用的信息。最近,我们使用一种攻击升级的药理学动物模型报告称,急性利培酮治疗可选择性地且剂量依赖性地降低成年攻击性行为表型的表达,在0.1mg/kg剂量时观察到攻击反应显著减少,该剂量即在临床环境中给予儿童和青少年的剂量范围内。本研究探讨了在青春期反复接触利培酮是否会阻止该动物模型中高度升级的攻击性行为表型的产生。为了验证这一假设,在青春期的不同时间段和不同时长(即1 - 4周)内,将引发攻击行为的刺激物(即盐酸可卡因,0.5mg/kg/天×28天)与抑制攻击行为剂量的利培酮(即0.1mg/kg/天)共同给药,然后在青春期后期对动物的攻击性行为进行针对性评分。给予利培酮可阻止成年攻击性行为表型的产生,只有在长时间接触利培酮(即3 - 4周)后,才会完全阻断成熟的攻击反应(即侧攻和胁腹/臀部撕咬)。对这些攻击反应的选择性预防作用,同时保持其他攻击行为指标不变(例如直立攻击姿势),表明利培酮以一种高度有针对性的抗攻击方式起作用,针对对成熟攻击反应模式重要的神经行为要素。