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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 335 (1987), S. 673-679 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Apomorphine ; Conditioning ; Dopamine receptors ; Stereotyped behaviour ; Akinesia ptosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Interactions between the direct (unconditioned) behavioural effects apomorphine and its conditioned effects after pairing with previously neutral stimuli were studied. Rats were injected once daily for 3–12 times, with apomorphine (2.0 mg/kg or 0.5 mg/kg or 0.07 mg/kg s.c. the dose kept constant in each series), in the presence of defined environmental stimuli (a wire cage in association with an acoustic and an olfactory stimulus) as conditional stimuli. The two larger doses produced stereotyped sniffing, licking, and gnawing, the smallest dose akinesia, ptosis, yawning and penile erections. During the conditioning phase, the drug produced most of the effects with increasing intensity and in the case of the stereotypies, there also was a shift to higher scores of stereotypy, with a reduced latency in onset of the signs. On the test day, 1 day after the last administration of apomorphine, the conditioned rats as well as “pseudoconditioned” controls were treated with a test dose of apomorphine in the presence of the conditional stimuli. Pseudoconditioned rats had been treated with the same pharmacological schedule of apomorphine and had the same familiarity with the stimuli, but both were kept separate. A test dose of 0.5 mg/kg of apomorphine produced stereotypies with a significantly higher score and shorter latency in onset in conditioned than in pseudoconditioned rats. Rats conditioned with the lowest dose showed a significantly longer total duration and a shorter latency in onset of akinesia and ptosis. In rats conditioned with the largest dose (2.0 mg/kg), administration of the lowest dose on the test day produced no stereotypies; neither the akinesia nor the ptosis were different between conditioned and pseudoconditioned rats, but yawning occurred with a higher frequency and a shorter latency in pseudoconditioned rats. When rats were conditioned with the lowest dose and tested with 0.5 mg/kg, the level of stereotypies was identical in both groups of rats, whereas akinesia and ptosis were not observed. Yawning and penile erections occurred more frequently, but for short periods only, in conditioned rats. The results showed that apomorphine-induced stereotypies, akinesia and ptosis could be conditioned, and the conditioned effects mimicked the unconditioned responses, which depended on the dose. Conditioned and unconditioned signs of an increased dopaminergic neurotransmission, observed after large doses of apomorphine, thus acted in a synergistic way; the same applied to conditioned and unconditioned signs observed after a small dose and were perhaps due to a decreased dopaminergic transmission. In contrast, when conditioned and unconditioned signs acted in a mutually antagonistic way (increased vs. decreased dopaminergic transmission), the unconditioned signs predominated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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