Sex Differences in the Behavioral Effects of 24-h/day Access to Cocaine under a Discrete Trial Procedure

被引:0
作者
Wendy J Lynch
Jane R Taylor
机构
[1] Yale University,Department of Psychiatry
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2004年 / 29卷
关键词
addiction; animal model; cocaine; motivation; rat; self-administration; sex differences;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although more men than women are addicted to cocaine, it has been suggested that women may have an accelerated transition to addiction, and that once addicted they may be more vulnerable to relapse. Here we investigate the effects of extended access to cocaine under a 24-h/day discrete trial procedure on patterns of intake and subsequent motivation to use cocaine as assessed by responding under a progressive-ratio schedule in male and female rats. Rats were initially trained to self-administer cocaine (1.5 mg/kg/infusion) under a fixed-ratio 1 schedule until acquisition occurred, and then responding was assessed under a progressive schedule for three sessions. Subsequently, rats had 24-h access to intravenous cocaine infusions (1.5 mg/kg) that were available in discrete trials (4, 10 min trials/h) for 7 consecutive days. At 10 days after the last discrete trial session, responding was reassessed under a progressive-ratio schedule for three additional sessions to investigate changes in motivation to obtain cocaine. Prior to cocaine self-administration under the 24-h access discrete trial procedure, males and females did not differ on cocaine self-administration under the fixed-ratio or progressive-ratio schedules. However, sex differences emerged under the 24-h access discrete trial procedure with females self-administering higher levels of cocaine, for longer initial periods of time, and showing a greater disruption in the diurnal control over intake than did males. Additionally, following a 10-day forced abstinence period, females responded at higher levels under the progressive-ratio schedule to obtain cocaine infusions than did males. These findings suggest that extended access to cocaine under the discrete trial cocaine self-administration procedure produces sex-dependent patterns of intake and sex-specific changes in motivation to obtain cocaine as measured by progressive-ratio responding.
引用
收藏
页码:943 / 951
页数:8
相关论文
共 125 条
[1]  
Ahmed SH(1998)Transition from moderate to excessive drug intake: change in hedonic set point Science 282 298-300
[2]  
Koob GF(1999)Long-lasting increase in the set point for cocaine self-administration after escalation in rats Psychopharmacology 146 303-312
[3]  
Ahmed SH(1997)A critique of fixed and progressive ratio schedules used to examine the neural substrates of drug reinforcement Pharmacol Biochem Behav 57 441-447
[4]  
Koob GF(1999)Effects of sex and gonadectomy on cocaine metabolism in the rat J Pharmacol Exp Ther 290 1316-1323
[5]  
Arnold JM(1999)Gender differences in substance use disorders Psychiatr Clin North Am 22 241-252
[6]  
Roberts DCS(2002)Sex differences in the effect of baclofen on the acquisition of cociane self-administration in rats Drug Alcohol Depend 66 61-69
[7]  
Bowman BP(2002)Influence of estrogen in the acquisition of intravenously self-administration in rats selectively bred for differential saccharin intake: phenotype and sex differences Psychopharmacology 161 304-313
[8]  
Vaughan SR(1996)Gender differences in crack users who are research volunteers Drug Alcohol Depend 42 55-63
[9]  
Walker QD(2001)Gender differences in cocaine craving among non-treatment-seeking individuals with cocaine dependence Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse 27 193-202
[10]  
Davis SL(1999)Limited sex differences in response to ‘binge’ smoked cocaine use in humans Neuropsychopharmacology 21 445-454