Cazala P, David V
Laboratoire de Neurosciences Comportementales et Cognitives, CNRS URA 339, Université de Bordeaux I, Talence, France.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 1995 May;51(1):49-55. doi: 10.1016/0091-3057(94)00342-g.
Two experiments were performed in BALB/c mice implanted bilaterally with guide cannulae. In the first experiment, the tips of the guide cannulae were positioned 1.5 mm above the lateral hypothalamus (LH). On each experimental day, injection cannulae were inserted into each side of the LH. The experiment, carried out in a Y-maze, was composed of two phases. During the initial acquisition period, which lasted 4 days, animals were allowed to self-inject, successively, on alternate days, one dose of morphine into one side of the LH and a different dose in the other side. From the fifth day, the subjects were given the possibility of choosing between these two doses by entering into a given arm of the Y-maze. When the two doses available were 5 ng and 50 ng or 15 ng and 50 ng, the subjects rapidly discriminated them and preferentially triggered the injection of the higher dose (50 ng). When the two doses available were 30 ng and 50 ng, the mice triggered indifferently the two doses during the first three sessions. A discrimination between these two doses began to become apparent from the fourth session, with the subjects preferring to trigger the dose of 50 ng. In a second experiment, the tips of the guide cannulae were positioned either 1.5 mm or 2.6 mm above the LH, the bilateral injection cannulae consequently being inserted either into the LH or into the overlying ventral thalamus (TH). Experimental conditions were the same as that of Experiment 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)