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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Alcohol drinking ; Brain amines ; Neonatal ; Open field ; Porsolt's swim test ; Propranolol ; Rat ; Sleep ; Spontaneous alternation ; Startle reaction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The present study examined the effects of early postnatal treatment with a beta-adrenoceptor antagonist propranolol (5 mg/kg IP daily) on concomitant and subsequent behavior and central aminergic transmission in rats. During propranolol exposure from the 7th to the 20th postnatal days sleep-wake recordings, carried out with the static charge sensitive bed (SCSB) method, showed a decrease in the percentage of active sleep and an increase in waking. When the animals were 1–3 months of age, the open field behavior was changed, immobility time in the Porsolt's swim test was lengthened, and voluntary alcohol consumption was increased in the propranolol-treated rats. Neither motor reactivity to auditory stimuli nor spontaneous alternation behavior was affected. At the age of 4 months concentrations of brain amines and their metabolites were measured from several brain regions. In the propranolol-treated rats the noradrenaline levels were increased in the limbic forebrain and cerebellum. The results suggest that in rats the exposure to propranolol during the rapid growth period of cerebral catecholamine systems, and the concomitant alterations in sleep are related to later changes in behavior and to increased noradrenaline content in the limbic forebrain and cerebellum.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1435-1463
    Keywords: Thioperamide ; H3 autoreceptors ; histamine ; portocaval anastomosis ; EEG ; rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Histaminergic H3 receptor antagonists stimulate neuronal histamine release and could consequently have a number of physiological effects in the brain. The effects of H3 receptor blockade, induced by systemically administered thioperamide, were assessed on the frontal cortex electroencephalographic (EEG) properties in freely behaving rats. The relationship of EEG activity variables to endogenous brain histaminergic markers was also examined, both in controls and in portocaval anastomosis (PCA)-operated rats (which show increased levels of brain histamine and t-methylhistamine). Thioperamide reduced the incidence of thalamusregulated EEG spindles, while it slightly increased their amplitude. It furthermore reduced the spectral power of low-frequency (1.5–5 Hz) EEG, which effect was equally distributed over the spindle and non-spindle EEG states. These EEG effects were accompanied by increased motor activity of the animals. Both the low-frequency EEG activity and spindle incidence correlated inversely with the histamine level of the brain (hypothalamus and cerebellum excluded) while t-methylhistamine level correlated with the degree of thioperamide-induced reduction of slow-wave EEG activity. The present results provide evidence for the involvement of endogenous brain histamine level, histamine release (as assessed by t-methylhistamine level) and H3 receptors in the histaminergic regulation of neocortical synchronization patterns assumed to be linked to arousal control.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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