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Behavioural analysis of the anorectic effects of fluoxetine and fenfluramine
Authors:Paul Willner  Joan McGuirk  Gavin Phillips  Richard Muscat
Institution:(1) Psychology Department, City of London Polytechnic, Old Castle Street, E1 7NT London, UK
Abstract:Two sets of experiments were carried out to compare the effects of fenfluramine and fluoxetine on consummatory and operant behaviour. In food-deprived rats allowed access to a 35% sucrose solution, an initial period of sucrose consumption was followed by a short period of grooming and exploratory behaviour, later superceded by resting. This ldquobehavioural satiety sequencerdquo was advanced by fluoxetine, but disrupted bydl-fenfluramine, which suppressed post-prandial resting, even at sub-anorectic doses. Fluoxetine also elicited resting behaviour following water drinking. However, this did not appear to be a non-specific sedative effect, since fluoxetine increased post-prandial grooming. In rats performing on random interval schedules of food reinforcement, fluoxetine caused proportionally greater decreases in responding on a reinforcement-lean schedule (RI-300s), as compared to a reinforcement-rich schedule (RI-7.5s); this effect is similar to that of a reduction in level of food deprivation. By contrast, fenfluramine reduced responding equally on both schedules. In both paradigms, the effects of fluoxetine were compatible with an increase in postprandial satiety, but the effects of fenfluramine were not.
Keywords:Feeding  Fluoxetine  Fenfluramine  Behavioural satiety sequence  Post-prandial resting  Matching law  Random interval reinforcement schedules  Rat
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