Drug Abuse Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Drug Abuse, including details on psychology, rehabilitation, consequences, treatment. | ||||||||
|
Reinstatement of MDMA (ecstasy) seeking by exposure to discrete drug-conditioned cues.Ball KT, Walsh KM, Rebec GV Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and Program in Neuroscience, Indiana University, 1101 East 10th Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA. The widely used recreational drug MDMA (ecstasy) supports self-administration in animals, but it is not known whether MDMA-associated cues are able to reinstate drug seeking in a relapse model of drug addiction. To assess this possibility, drug-naïve rats were trained to press a lever for MDMA infusions (0.30 mg/kg/infusion, i.v.) paired with a compound cue (light and tone) in daily 2 h sessions. Responding was reinforced contingent on a modified fixed-ratio 5 schedule of reinforcement. Conditioned cue-induced reinstatement tests were conducted after lever pressing was extinguished in the absence of MDMA and the conditioned cues. Conditioned cues reinstated lever pressing after extinction, and the magnitude of reinstatement was positively correlated with the level of responding during MDMA self-administration. These results show for the first time that conditioned cues can trigger reinstatement of MDMA-seeking behavior in rats, and that individual differences in the pattern of MDMA self-administration can predict the magnitude of reinstatement responding. Published 20 August 2007 in Pharmacol Biochem Behav, 87(4): 420-5.
© 2005-2008 Drug Abuse Research Today. All Rights Reserved. |
| ||||||