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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Elevated plus-maze ; Prior experience ; Diazepam response ; Light/dark box ; Anxiety ; Retest ; Mice
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A single prior undrugged exposure to the elevated plus-maze has been reported to reduce open arm activity on retest and to attenuate/abolish the anxiolytic response to benzodiazepines at retest intervals ranging from 48 h to 14 days. The present study was designed to examine the generality of these findings by comparing the effects of prior maze experience on baseline behaviour and response to diazepam in two murine models of anxiety. Parallel experiments were conducted in which DBA/2 mice were exposed/not exposed to the plus-maze, treated daily with saline or diazepam (2–4 mg/kg daily for 8 days) and then tested on either the elevated plus-maze or in the light/dark test of exploration. Results show that, in both tests, diazepam reduced behavioural indices of anxiety in maze-naive mice only. However, interpretation of this apparent loss of diazepam efficacy is at least partially confounded by the observation that maze experience per se altered baseline behaviour in both procedures,reducing open arm activity in the plus-maze andincreasing light compartment activity in the light/dark test. The apparent elimination of an anxiolytic response to diazepam in two animal models of anxiety by prior plus-maze experience is discussed in relation to experience-related baseline shifts in behaviour.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Elevated plus-maze ; Anxiety ; Antinociception ; Diazepam ; Prior experience ; Treatment regimen ; Mice
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Recent studies have shown that brief exposure to an elevated plus-maze (EPM) produces non-opioid antinociception in male mice. The present experiments were designed to assess the effects of diazepam on this phenomenon. When acutely administered, low doses (0.5–1.0 mg/kg) of diazepam failed to produce an anxiolytic profile and exerted rather inconsistent effects on EPM-induced elevations in tail-flick latencies. In EPM-experienced mice, chronic treatment with higher doses of diazepam (2–4 mg/kg, 8 days) produced a weak anxiolytic action and inhibited the early phase of EPM antinociception only. However, in EPM-naive mice, 8-day diazepam pretreatment exerted a marked anxiolytic effect and completely eliminated the antinociceptive response to the maze. Together, these data support the view that anxiety is a key factor in certain forms of adaptive pain inhibition and suggest a possible mediational role for benzodiazepine receptors. Our findings also show that prior exposure to the EPM, rather than chronic handling/injection, greatly reduces the anti-anxiety effect of diazepam. Furthermore, since re-exposure to the maze, perse, decreased time spent on the open arms and central platform, a shift in behavioural baseline (“retest anxiogenesis”) may have contributed to the weak behavioural effects of diazepam in test-experienced animals. Importantly, as chronic treatment with diazepam did not influence this anxiogenic-like retest profile, our data suggest that a single prior experience of the EPM may radically alter the nature of the anxiety reaction provoked by this test.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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