Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588-0308, USA.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2011 Jun;98(4):559-69. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2011.03.007. Epub 2011 Mar 21.
Antagonism of prepulse inhibition (PPI) deficits produced by psychotomimetic drugs has been widely used as an effective tool for the study of the mechanisms of antipsychotic action and identifying potential antipsychotic drugs. Many studies have relied on the acute effect of a single administration of antipsychotics, whereas patients with schizophrenia are treated chronically with antipsychotic drugs. The clinical relevance of acute antipsychotic effect in this model is still an open question. In this study, we investigated the time course of repeated antipsychotic treatment on persistent PPI deficit induced by repeated phencyclidine (PCP) treatment. After a baseline test with saline, male Sprague-Dawley rats were repeatedly injected with either vehicle, haloperidol (0.05mg/kg), clozapine (5.0 or 10.0mg/kg), olanzapine (2.0mg/kg), risperidone (1.0mg/kg) or quetiapine (10mg/kg), followed by PCP (1.5mg/kg, sc) and tested for PPI once daily for 6 consecutive days. A single injection of PCP disrupted PPI and this effect was maintained with repeated PCP injections throughout the testing period. Acute clozapine, but not other antipsychotic drugs, attenuated acute PCP-induced PPI disruption at both tested doses. With repeated treatment, clozapine and quetiapine maintained their attenuation, while risperidone enhanced its effect with a significant reduction of PCP-induced disruption toward the end of treatment period. In contrast, repeated haloperidol and olanzapine treatments were ineffective. The PPI effects of these drugs were more conspicuous at a higher prepulse level (e.g. 82dB) and were dissociable from their effects on startle response and general activity. Overall, the repeated PCP-PPI model appears to be a useful model for the study of the time-dependent antipsychotic effect, and may help identify potential treatments that have a quicker onset of action than current antipsychotics.
药物引起的前脉冲抑制(PPI)缺陷拮抗作用已被广泛用作研究抗精神病作用机制和识别潜在抗精神病药物的有效工具。许多研究依赖于单次给予抗精神病药物的急性作用,而精神分裂症患者则长期用抗精神病药物治疗。这种模型中急性抗精神病作用的临床相关性仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。在这项研究中,我们研究了反复给予抗精神病药物治疗对反复苯环己哌啶(PCP)治疗引起的持续 PPI 缺陷的时间过程。在使用盐水进行基线测试后,雄性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠反复给予载体、氟哌啶醇(0.05mg/kg)、氯氮平(5.0 或 10.0mg/kg)、奥氮平(2.0mg/kg)、利培酮(1.0mg/kg)或喹硫平(10mg/kg),然后给予 PCP(1.5mg/kg,sc),并在接下来的 6 天内每天进行一次 PPI 测试。单次注射 PCP 会破坏 PPI,并且这种效应在整个测试期间通过重复 PCP 注射得以维持。单次氯氮平,但不是其他抗精神病药物,可减轻两种测试剂量的急性 PCP 引起的 PPI 破坏。经过反复治疗,氯氮平和喹硫平维持其减轻作用,而利培酮则增强其作用,在治疗期末 PCP 引起的破坏显著减少。相比之下,反复给予氟哌啶醇和奥氮平治疗无效。这些药物的 PPI 作用在更高的预备脉冲水平(例如 82dB)下更为明显,并且与它们对惊吓反应和一般活动的影响可区分开来。总体而言,反复 PCP-PPI 模型似乎是研究时间依赖性抗精神病作用的有用模型,并且可能有助于确定比当前抗精神病药物更快起效的潜在治疗方法。