Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-ville, Montreal, QC, H3C 3J7, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology (CSBN), Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Eur J Neurosci. 2019 Aug;50(3):2054-2064. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13941. Epub 2018 Jul 24.
The faster drugs of abuse reach the brain, the greater is the risk of addiction. Even small differences in the rate of drug delivery can influence outcome. Infusing cocaine intravenously over 5 vs. 90-100 s promotes sensitization to the psychomotor and incentive motivational effects of the drug and preferentially recruits mesocorticolimbic regions. It remains unclear whether these effects are due to differences in how fast and/or how much drug reaches the brain. Here, we predicted that varying the rate of intravenous cocaine infusion between 5 and 90 s produces different rates of rise of brain drug concentrations, while producing similar peak concentrations. Freely moving male Wistar rats received acute intravenous cocaine infusions (2.0 mg/kg/infusion) over 5, 45 and 90 s. We measured cocaine concentrations in the dorsal striatum using rapid-sampling microdialysis (1 sample/min) and high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. We also measured extracellular concentrations of dopamine and other neurochemicals. Regardless of infusion rate, acute cocaine did not change concentrations of non-dopaminergic neurochemicals. Infusion rate did not significantly influence peak concentrations of cocaine or dopamine, but concentrations increased faster following 5-s infusions. We also assessed psychomotor activity as a function of cocaine infusion rate. Infusion rate did not significantly influence total locomotion, but locomotion increased earlier following 5-s infusions. Thus, small differences in the rate of cocaine delivery influence both the rate of rise of drug and dopamine concentrations, and psychomotor activity. A faster rate of rise of drug and dopamine concentrations might be an important issue in making rapidly delivered cocaine more addictive.
药物进入大脑的速度越快,成瘾的风险就越大。即使药物输送速度的微小差异也会影响结果。静脉内注射可卡因 5 秒与 90-100 秒相比,会促进药物对精神运动和激励动机效应的敏感性,并优先招募中脑边缘奖赏系统。目前尚不清楚这些效应是由于药物到达大脑的速度差异还是由于药物量的差异。在这里,我们预测在 5 秒至 90 秒之间改变静脉内可卡因输注的速度会产生不同的脑内药物浓度上升率,同时产生相似的峰值浓度。自由活动的雄性 Wistar 大鼠接受 5、45 和 90 秒的急性静脉内可卡因输注(2.0mg/kg/输注)。我们使用快速采样微透析(1 个样本/分钟)和高效液相色谱-串联质谱法测量背侧纹状体中的可卡因浓度。我们还测量了多巴胺和其他神经化学物质的细胞外浓度。无论输注速度如何,急性可卡因均未改变非多巴胺能神经化学物质的浓度。输注速度并未显著影响可卡因或多巴胺的峰值浓度,但 5 秒输注后浓度上升更快。我们还评估了作为可卡因输注率函数的运动活动。输注速度对总运动没有显著影响,但 5 秒输注后运动更早增加。因此,药物输送速度的微小差异会影响药物和多巴胺浓度以及运动活动的上升速度。药物和多巴胺浓度上升速度更快可能是使快速输送的可卡因更具成瘾性的重要问题。