2006
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-006-0538-5
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Chlordiazepoxide and dizocilpine, but not morphine, selectively impair acquisition under a novel repeated-acquisition and performance task in rats

Abstract: These results with rats resembled those previously obtained for response-sequence learning in primates, rather than those previously reported for spatial learning in rats. Therefore, previous discrepancies in results for NMDA antagonists and opiate agonists across tasks probably were not a function of the species studied, but, rather, they more likely were a function of unique variables controlling acquisition within each task.

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Cited by 13 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…For example, Keller et al (2000) has shown excellent visual discrimination in rats using a similar apparatus to the one used here. More importantly for the present study, Pitts et al (2006) found selective effects of certain drugs (e.g., chlordiazepoxide) in a RAP procedure identical to the one used here. In the present study, the effects of MA, MPD and MDMA were determined.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…For example, Keller et al (2000) has shown excellent visual discrimination in rats using a similar apparatus to the one used here. More importantly for the present study, Pitts et al (2006) found selective effects of certain drugs (e.g., chlordiazepoxide) in a RAP procedure identical to the one used here. In the present study, the effects of MA, MPD and MDMA were determined.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Dizocilpine can induce a good model of cognitive impairment with up to 0.1mg/kg subcutaneous doses without causing motor issues or intoxication (van der Staay et al, 2011). Of specific interest to our radial-arm repeated acquisition task, dizocilpine has been shown to increase errors on a radial-arm task (Levin et al, 1998; Ward et al, 1990) as well as impair acquisition of behavior in a novel repeated acquisition nose poke test (Pitts et al, 2006). Nicotine was previously shown to attenuate the impairment caused by this NMDA antagonist in a radial-arm maze task (Levin et al, 1998).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a possibility that morphine interfered with the rat’s memory of this relationship, thus confounding interpretation of the data. However, it has been reported that morphine at 5.6mg/kg did not impair performance in a nose-poke repeated performance test (Pitts et al, 2006), and pre-test subcutaneous administration of 5 mg/kg morphine had no effect on memory retrieval in a step-down avoidance test (Lu et al, 2010). Further, post-training administration of 2.5 mg/kg morphine did not significantly reduce step-through latency in a step-through passive avoidance study (Khajehpour et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%