نتایج جستجو برای: conditioned place preference

تعداد نتایج: 286288  

2003
B. Ribeiro Do Couto M. A. Aguilar C. Manzanedo M. Rodríguez-Arias J. Miñarro

To construct a model of relapse of drug abuse in mice, the induction, we evaluated the extinction and reinstatement of morphine-induced place preference. In Experiment 1, we examined the effects of morphine (0, 2, 3, 5, 10, 20 and 40 mg/kg) in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm. Mice showed CPP with 5, 10, 20 and 40 mg/kg. In Experiment 2, we evaluated the effects of two different ...

Journal: :Behavioral neuroscience 2011
Robin M Voigt Amy A Herrold T Celeste Napier

The powerful, long-lasting association between the rewarding effects of a drug and contextual cues associated with drug administration can be studied using conditioned place preference (CPP). The GABA(B) receptor agonist baclofen facilitates the extinction of morphine-induced CPP in mice. The current study extended this work by determining if baclofen could enhance the extinction of methampheta...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2008
Christina M Gremel Christopher L Cunningham

Although progress has been made identifying the neural areas underlying the primary reinforcing effects of ethanol, few studies have examined the neural areas mediating ethanol-induced conditioned effects. Previous work using the conditioned place preference (CPP) procedure implicates the ventral tegmental area (VTA) (Bechtholt and Cunningham, 2005), but the downstream neural areas modulating t...

2017
Tanja Bregolin Barbara S. Pinheiro Rana El Rawas Gerald Zernig

The reorientation away from drugs of abuse and toward social interaction is a highly desirable but as yet elusive goal in the therapy of substance dependence. We could previously show that cocaine preferring Sprague-Dawley rats which engaged in only four 15 min episodes of dyadic social interaction (DSI) did not reacquire and reexpress cocaine conditioned place preference (CPP) after a single c...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2007
Thomas S Hnasko Bethany N Sotak Richard D Palmiter

Rodents learn to associate the rewarding effects of drugs with the environment in which they are encountered and, subsequently, will display a conditioned place preference (CPP) for that environment. Cocaine-induced CPP is generally thought to be mediated through inhibition of the dopamine transporter and the consequent increase in extracellular dopamine. However, here we report that dopamine-d...

Journal: :Neuron 2005
Courtney A. Miller John F. Marshall

Relapse into drug taking among addicts often depends on learned associations between drug-paired cues and the rewarding effects of these drugs, such as cocaine (COC). Memory for drug-paired cues resists extinction and contributes to the high rate of relapse; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying these associations are not understood. We show that COC-conditioned place preference (CPP) ac...

2012
Rana El Rawas Sabine Klement Kai K. Kummer Michael Fritz Georg Dechant Alois Saria Gerald Zernig

Positive social interaction could play an essential role in switching the preference of the substance dependent individual away from drug related activities. We have previously shown that conditioned place preference (CPP) for cocaine at the dose of 15 mg/kg and CPP for four 15-min episodes of social interaction were equally strong when rats were concurrently conditioned for place preference by...

Journal: :Neurotoxicology and teratology 2007
Maria Aberg Dean Wade Erin Wall Sari Izenwasser

MDMA (ecstasy) is a drug commonly used in adolescence, and many users of MDMA also use other illicit drugs. It is not known whether MDMA during adolescence alters subsequent responses to cocaine differently than in adults. This study examined the effects of MDMA in adolescent and adult rats on cocaine conditioned reward. At the start of these experiments, adolescent rats were at postnatal day (...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 2009
Thomas I Nathaniel Jaak Panksepp Robert Huber

Several lines of evidence suggest that exploring the neurochemical basis of reward in invertebrate species may provide clues for the fundamental behavioral and neurobiology underpinnings of drug addiction. How the presence of drug-sensitive reward relates to a decrease in drug-seeking behavior and reinstatement of drug-seeking behavior in invertebrate systems is not known. The present study of ...

Journal: :Cerebral cortex 2005
Rossella Ventura Antonio Alcaro Stefano Puglisi-Allegra

Increasing evidence suggests that in addition to the mesoaccumbens dopamine (DA) system other neurotransmitter and brain systems are also involved in opiate addiction. Recent evidence points to a major involvement of brain norepinephrine (NE) in the behavioral and central effects of opiates and, more specifically, indicates that NE in the prefrontal cortex may have a critical role in rewarding ...

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