Corticosterone and avoidance in rats with basolateral amygdala lesions.

Abstract
Produced deficient acquisition of 2-way active and passive avoidance in 15 male Moll-Wistar rats after bilateral electrolytic lesions restricted to the dorsal part of the basolateral nuclei. Other deficits also suggest a general reduction in fear or arousal: less immobility in the open field and during active-avoidance intertrial intervals, and slower escape latencies and less pituitary-adrenal activation during the initial active-avoidance session. Anatomical analysis of the areas producing the greatest deficit suggests that differential involvement of the insula may explain phylogenetic differences between these data from the rat and previous data from the cat, which show only active-avoidance deficiency after basolateral lesions. (26 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)