DISCRIMINATIVE STIMULUS PROPERTIES OF A LOW DL-AMPHETAMINE DOSE

  • 1 January 1976
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 223 (1), 34-42
Abstract
Using a 2-lever food-reinforced operant procedure, rats (n = 10) were trained to discriminate 0.16 mg/kg dl-amphetamine from saline. Over the dose range 0.08-0.63 mg/kg, cue detection was dose-dependent (ED50: 0.13 mg/kg). dl-Amphetamine [5 mg/kg] was not generalized with the standard treatment. Further generalization experiments indicated that hydroxyamphetamine (ED50: 0.16 mg/kg) produces a discriminative stimulus similar to that of 0.16 mg/kg dl-amphetamine. Apomorphine (0.16 mg/kg), chlordiazepoxide (10 mg/kg), desipramine (10 mg/kg), fentanyl (0.04 mg/kg), haloperidol (0.04 mg/kg) and isopropamide (0.04 mg/kg) were not generalized with dl-amphetamine. Haloperidol (0.04-0.16 mg/kg) blocked the perception of 0.16 mg/kg dl-amphetamine in a dose-related way (ED50:0.092 mg/kg). The discriminative stimulus properties of low dl-amphetamine doses differ qualitatively from those of high doses. The discriminative stimulus produced by 0.16 mg/kg dl-amphetamine presumably originates peripherally, whereas that produced by high doses of the drug reportedly is of central origin.

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