McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School, 115 Mill Street, Belmont, MA 02478, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2011 Jan 15;113(2-3):157-64. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2010.07.019. Epub 2010 Aug 30.
Previous research suggests that intrinsic efficacy of benzodiazepines is an important determinant of their behavioral effects. We evaluated the reinforcing effects of the benzodiazepine partial agonist bretazenil using behavioral economic models referred to as "consumer demand" and "labor supply". Four rhesus monkeys were trained under a progressive-ratio (PR) schedule of i.v. midazolam injection. A range of doses of bretazenil (0.001-0.03 mg/kg/injection and vehicle) was evaluated for self-administration with an initial response requirement of 40 that doubled to 640; significant self-administration was maintained at doses of 0.003-0.03 mg/kg/injection. Next, a dose of bretazenil that maintained peak injections/session was made available with initial response requirements doubling from 10 to 320 (maximum possible response requirements of 160 and 5120, respectively), and increasing response requirements decreased self-administration (mean number of injections/session) of a peak dose (0.01 mg/kg/injection). Analyses based on consumer demand revealed that a measure of reinforcing strength termed "essential value", for bretazenil was similar to that previously obtained with midazolam (non-selective full agonist), but less than that observed for zolpidem (full agonist, selective for α1 subunit-containing GABA(A) receptors). According to labor supply analysis, the reinforcing effects of bretazenil were influenced by the economic concept referred to as a "price effect", similar to our previous findings with midazolam but not zolpidem. In general, behavioral economic indicators of reinforcing effectiveness did not differentiate bretazenil from a non-selective full agonist. These findings raise the possibility that degree of intrinsic efficacy of a benzodiazepine agonist may not be predictive of relative reinforcing effectiveness.
先前的研究表明,苯二氮䓬类药物的内在效能是其行为效应的重要决定因素。我们使用被称为“消费者需求”和“劳动供给”的行为经济学模型来评估苯二氮䓬类部分激动剂布雷替唑仑的强化效应。四只恒河猴在静脉注射咪达唑仑的递增比例(PR)时间表下接受训练。评估了一系列布雷替唑仑剂量(0.001-0.03mg/kg/注射和载体)的自我给药,初始反应要求为 40,增加到 640;在 0.003-0.03mg/kg/注射剂量下维持显著的自我给药。接下来,在初始反应要求从 10 增加到 320(分别为最大可能的反应要求 160 和 5120)的情况下,提供维持峰值注射/会议的布雷替唑仑剂量,增加反应要求会降低峰值剂量(0.01mg/kg/注射)的自我给药(平均注射/会议次数)。基于消费者需求的分析表明,一种称为“本质价值”的强化强度测量值,布雷替唑仑与以前用咪达唑仑(非选择性完全激动剂)获得的值相似,但低于唑吡坦(完全激动剂,选择性作用于包含α1 亚基的 GABA(A)受体)观察到的值。根据劳动供给分析,布雷替唑仑的强化效应受到经济概念“价格效应”的影响,与我们以前用咪达唑仑的发现相似,但与唑吡坦不同。一般来说,布雷替唑仑强化有效性的行为经济学指标与非选择性完全激动剂没有区别。这些发现提出了一种可能性,即苯二氮䓬类激动剂的内在效能程度可能不能预测相对强化效果。