Nicotine discrimination and self administration in humans as a function of smoking status

被引:49
|
作者
Perkins, KA [1 ]
Sanders, M [1 ]
DAmico, D [1 ]
Wilson, A [1 ]
机构
[1] CHILDRENS HOSP,DEPT ANESTHESIA,PITTSBURGH,PA 15213
关键词
nicotine; discrimination; self-administration; subjective effects; tolerance; sex differences; smoking status; reinforcement;
D O I
10.1007/s002130050304
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Nicotine's discriminative stimulus effects may be critical to understanding reinforcement of tobacco smoking. It is not known whether regular nicotine exposure produces tolerance or sensitivity to these effects. In this study, male and female smokers (n = 11) and never-smokers (n = 10) were trained to discriminate 20 mu g/kg nicotine by nasal spray from placebo (0) on day 1. On day 2, both groups were tested on generalization of this discrimination across intermittent presentations of 0, 3, 6, 12, and 20 mu g/kg nicotine in random order. Quantitative and quantal behavioral discrimination tasks, used in previous research. were employed. On day 3, subjects were instructed to self-administer sprays from the 20 mu g/kg nicotine versus 0 bottles in a concurrent-choice procedure. All but one subject (female smoker) learned reliably to discriminate 20 mu g/kg nicotine from placebo (greater than or equal to 80% correct) on day 1. Nicotine-appropriate responding on day 2 was attenuated in smokers versus never-smokers at 20 mu g/kg on the quantitative task and at 12 mu g/kg on the quantal task, suggesting tolerance. There was no difference in responding at other doses. Smokers also showed attenuated responses on the subjective measure of ''head rush'', which was associated with discrimination responding in both groups. Nicotine self-administration was significantly greater in smokers versus never-smokers, who self-administered nicotine below chance levels, and was inversely related to discrimination behavior in never-smokers but unrelated in smokers. Women smokers showed less change in nicotine-appropriate responding across generalization doses, reported less confidence in discriminating training doses during acquisition on day 1, and tended to self-administer less nicotine on day 3. These results indicate that smokers may become tolerant to the discriminative stimulus effects of nicotine, perhaps promoting increased use.
引用
收藏
页码:361 / 370
页数:10
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