The chlordiazepoxide/pentylenetetrazol discrimination: characterization of drug interactions and homeostatic responses to drug challenges
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 96 (1), 15-20
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02431527
Abstract
Rats were trained to discriminate chlordiazepoxide (CDP) from pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) in a two-lever food motivated discrimination task. Training drug doses were adjusted until subjects emitted approximately 50% of their responses on each of the two drug-appropriate levers during saline injection tests. Tests that followed injection of CDP/PTZ combinations illustrated a reciprocal antagonism between the two drugs. Saline-injection tests that followed large dose injections of CDP revealed a period of predominantly PTZ-appropriate responding that persisted after the initial period of predominantly CDP-appropriate responding. These data are interpreted to suggest that, unlike some other drugs that have been shown to antagonize the behavioral and CNS effects of benzodiazepines, the interoceptive stimulus generated by PTZ occupies a position opposite to that of CDP along some single affective continuum. In addition, these data suggest that drug/drug (DD) discriminations are capable of characterizing the interactions between training drugs. Finally, the data suggest that the CDP/PTZ discrimination is a sensitive detector of bidirectional shifts in interoceptive stimulus state along the CDP/PTZ continuum.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chlordiazepoxide enhances the anxiogenic action of CGS 8216 in the social interaction test: Evidence for benzodiazepine withdrawal?Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1985
- GABAergic synapses supramolecular organization and biochemical regulationNeuropharmacology, 1983
- The pentylenetetrazol model of anxiety detects withdrawal from diazepam in ratsLife Sciences, 1983
- Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) and Lisuride: Differentiation of Their Neuropharmacological ActionsScience, 1982
- Controlling behavior experiments with BASIC on 6502-based microcomputersBehavior Research Methods, 1981
- Caffeine antagonizes several central effects of diazepamLife Sciences, 1981
- The opponent-process theory of acquired motivation: The costs of pleasure and the benefits of pain.American Psychologist, 1980
- Evidence that bicuculline and picrotoxin act at separate sites to antagonize γ-aminobutyric acid in rat cuneate nucleusNeuropharmacology, 1980
- The opponent-process theory of acquired motivation: The costs of pleasure and the benefits of pain.American Psychologist, 1980
- Purinergic inhibition of diazepam binding to rat brain ()Life Sciences, 1979