Rats were trained to use the right forelimb to exert continuous downward pressure on a force transducer and simultaneously to drink sweetened milk from a dipper controlled by the emitted force. Oscillations in forelimb force during this performance were spectrally analyzed to describe the tremorogenic effects of haloperidol (0.04, 0.08, or 0.16 mg/kg). Haloperidol reduced time-on-task and increased the variance of force oscillations in the 10.0-25.0-Hz frequency band. When atropine sulfate (5 mg/kg) was given along with haloperidol, time-on-task was partially restored, and the effects of haloperidol on the 10.0-25.0-Hz band were diminished. These data suggest that the behavioral deficits produced by relatively low doses of haloperidol in rats are analogous (and possibly homologous) to neuroleptic-induced Parkinsonian symptoms in humans.
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