Abstract
After 3 days of dosing rats with lorazepam (0.25 mg/kg), tolerance developed to its sedative effects. Recovery from this tolerance was rapid. No differences could be detected in undrugged behaviour 24 h after the last dose and no differences in response to a probe injection could be found when 2 drug-free days intervened between the chronic treatment and test dose. RO 15-1788 (1–4 mg/kg) antagonised the sedative effects of acute lorazepam (0.5 and 0.25 mg/kg), but chronic treatment with these doses concomitantly with lorazepam did not prevent the development of tolerance. However, 4 mg/kg RO 15-1788 administered for 5 days at the same time as lorazepam (0.5 mg/kg) and again 45 min later attenuated the development of tolerance. Plasma concentrations after acute and chronic treatment did not differ for 0.25 mg/kg lorazepam, but they were lower following chronic treatment with 0.5 mg/kg. Therefore the development of behavioural tolerance in rats to the sedative effects of benzodiazepines probably involves changes in benzodiazepine receptors, in addition to a pharmacokinetic contribution after treatment with high doses.