White Wesley, White Ilsun M
Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, Morehead State University, 414 Reed Hall, Morehead, KY 40351, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2016 Oct 15;165:187-94. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2016.07.015. Epub 2016 Jul 25.
Rats given drugs of abuse such as amphetamine or morphine show longer-term effects, that is, signs of acute withdrawal, including hypoactivity, hypophagia, and blunted affect, sometime between 12 and 24h after treatment. This research explores the possibility that signs of acute withdrawal produced by different drugs of abuse are instigated by overlapping mechanisms. The specific objectives of the research were to see if amphetamine and morphine produced longer-term hypoactivity, and to see if any longer-term hypoactivity elicited by the drugs could be blocked by SCH23390, a dopamine D1 antagonist. Six groups of rats, with eight rats in each group, were exposed to a series of five-day tests. Near light onset of Test Day 1, each animal was given control administrations, consisting of a saline treatment (1.0ml/kg) followed 30m later by a saline posttreatment, and locomotor activity was monitored for the next 24h. On Test Day 3, each animal was given experimental administrations, and locomotor activity was again monitored for 24h. Each group received only one combination of experimental administrations across tests. Experimental administrations consisted of saline, amphetamine (2.0mg/kg), or morphine (5.0mg/kg), followed by saline or SCH23390 (0.05mg/kg). All administrations were subcutaneous. Amphetamine and morphine produced longer-term hypoactivity, having similar time courses and magnitudes. SCH23390 blocked the longer-term hypoactivity produced by both drugs. Saline and SCH23390 produced no changes in longer-term activity in their own right. The time course of amphetamine-elicited longer-term hypoactivity resembled that of amphetamine-elicited longer-term hypophagia observed in a prior study. Approximately 1/4 of the animals given amphetamine or morphine did not show longer-term hypoactivity ("low withdrawal" rats). Amphetamine and morphine may initiate the cascade of events resulting in signs of acute withdrawal by producing activation in a common pathway that uses dopamine as a neurotransmitter. Different signs of acute withdrawal (hypoactivity and hypophagia) may involve the short-term activation of the same common pathway. Low withdrawal rats may have a different vulnerability to amphetamine and may show differences in drug assessment outcomes relative to animals that manifest distinct signs of acute withdrawal.
给予诸如苯丙胺或吗啡等成瘾药物的大鼠会出现长期效应,即急性戒断症状,包括活动减退、摄食减少和情感迟钝,在治疗后12至24小时之间的某个时间出现。本研究探讨了不同成瘾药物产生的急性戒断症状是否由重叠机制引发的可能性。该研究的具体目标是观察苯丙胺和吗啡是否会产生长期的活动减退,以及这两种药物引发的任何长期活动减退是否能被多巴胺D1拮抗剂SCH23390阻断。将六组大鼠,每组八只,进行一系列为期五天的测试。在测试第一天接近天亮时,给每只动物进行对照给药,包括一次生理盐水处理(1.0毫升/千克),30分钟后再进行一次生理盐水后处理,然后在接下来的24小时内监测其运动活动。在测试第三天,给每只动物进行实验给药,并再次监测24小时的运动活动。每组在所有测试中仅接受一种实验给药组合。实验给药包括生理盐水、苯丙胺(2.0毫克/千克)或吗啡(5.0毫克/千克),随后是生理盐水或SCH23390(0.05毫克/千克)。所有给药均为皮下注射。苯丙胺和吗啡产生了长期的活动减退,具有相似的时间进程和程度。SCH23390阻断了这两种药物产生的长期活动减退。生理盐水和SCH23390本身对长期活动没有影响。苯丙胺引发的长期活动减退的时间进程与先前研究中观察到的苯丙胺引发的长期摄食减少的时间进程相似。大约四分之一给予苯丙胺或吗啡的动物没有表现出长期的活动减退(“低戒断”大鼠)。苯丙胺和吗啡可能通过在一条以多巴胺作为神经递质的共同通路中产生激活作用,引发导致急性戒断症状的一系列事件。急性戒断的不同症状(活动减退和摄食减少)可能涉及同一共同通路的短期激活。低戒断大鼠可能对苯丙胺具有不同的易感性,并且相对于表现出明显急性戒断症状的动物,可能在药物评估结果上存在差异。