We investigated how repeated treatments with methamphetamine (4.0 mg kg-1, i.p.) plus scopolamine (0.5 mg kg-1, i.p.) and methamphetamine alone effected behavioural sensitization and conditioned response in rats. Repeated methamphetamine plus scopolamine treatment induced a more progressive and enduring enhancement of focused stereotyped behaviour than repeated methamphetamine treatment. Stereotyped behaviour induced by methamphetamine plus scopolamine was reproduced by challenge injections of methamphetamine plus scopolamine, methamphetamine, and to a lesser extent by scopolamine challenges. The methamphetamine plus scopolamine-sensitized rats were conditioned to a low frequency tone (300 Hz, 100 dB) associated with the drug state. They exhibited a conditioned response to pairings of the tone (conditioned stimulus) and placebo injections. However, they did not respond to the tone alone or the placebo injections alone. The methamphetamine-sensitized rats failed to demonstrate any conditioning; only the repeated methamphetamine plus scopolamine treatment induced sensitization to the drug-associated tone. Pairings of exteroceptive conditioned stimulus-interoceptive unconditioned stimulus associations may provide an important source for conditioning to the tone associated with the drug state. We conclude that behavioural sensitization may operate via a reciprocal balance between the dopaminergic and cholinergic inhibitory systems, in favour of a dopaminergic dominance. Conditioning to the drug-associated tone may be mediated via a reciprocal balance between the two transmitter systems.
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