The purpose of this research was to characterize drug-induced rebound cue states using a three-choice, agonist-vehicle-antagonist drug-discrimination procedure. Rats were trained to discriminate among 0.50 mg/kg amphetamine (AM), distilled water (DW), and 0.03 mg/kg haloperidol (HA) in a three-lever drug discrimination task. Time-dependent changes in cue state were assessed following single doses of AM (5 and 10 mg/kg), HA (1 mg/kg), and cocaine (30 and 40 mg/kg). Consistent with expectations derived from the results of a study that used a two-lever AM-HA discrimination task, single doses of AM produced rebound responding on the HA-appropriate lever that was dose-dependent and peaked at 24 h following administration. In addition, cocaine substituted for AM at 0.5-2 h post-injection and then produced HA-like rebound responding that peaked at 24-36 h post-administration. Contrary to expectations, however, rebound AM-like responding did not occur following HA administration. Perhaps two- and three-choice discrimination tasks differ in their ability to characterize qualitative aspects of the post-haloperidol cue state. Knowledge of the time course of drug-induced adaptive processes, measured as withdrawal in the present research, is necessary for a complete description of a drug's effects and is important in understanding the effects of repeated drug administration.
The robust and long-lasting rebound cues associated with training level doses of NIC suggest that maximal tolerance would likely develop to the NIC cue during the acquisition phase of the conventional NIC-saline discrimination study.
The first purpose of this research was to assess withdrawal haloperidol-appropriate lever responding 24 h after a single administration of 0.35, 0.75, and 1.00 mg/kg amphetamine. Rats were trained to discriminate among 0.35 mg/kg amphetamine (AM), distilled water (DW), and 0.033 mg/kg haloperidol (HA) in a three-lever drug discrimination task. An increase in HA-appropriate lever responding occurred following the 1.00 mg/kg dose of AM but not after either of the lower doses. The second purpose was to determine the effect of repeated administration of 0.75 mg/kg AM. Two groups of animals were given five administrations of drug, one at an interdose interval (IDI) of 24 h and the other at an IDI of 48 h. Control animals were given injections of DW. Increased HA-appropriate lever responding occurred in both of the AM-treated groups. The magnitude of this effect tended to be less in the 48-h IDI group. Thus, even though HA-lever responding was not evident 24 h after a single administration of 0.75 mg/kg AM, it was produced by repeated administration of this dose, even at 48-h intervals.
These results suggest that the two-choice and three-choice task used here differ in how the post-HA withdrawal cue is characterized. This finding emphasizes the importance of knowing the relative locations of the agonist-, vehicle-, and antagonist-produced cues on the interoceptive stimulus continuum established by discrimination training.
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