Effects of priming injections of MDMA and cocaine on reinstatement of MDMA- and cocaine-seeking in rats |
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Authors: | Schenk Susan Hely Lincoln Gittings David Lake Barbara Daniela Evangeline |
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Affiliation: | Victoria University of Wellington, School of Psychology, Wellington, New Zealand. Susan.Schenk@vuw.ac.nz |
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Abstract: | Exposure to self-administered drugs is sufficient to produce drug-seeking in animal models. In many cases priming injections of drugs that share discriminative stimulus properties with the self-administered drug also can lead to drug-seeking, suggesting that exposure might precipitate relapse. The present investigation examined the ability of MDMA or cocaine priming injections to reinstate extinguished drug-seeking in rats. Priming injections of cocaine (0-20.0 mg/kg) and MDMA (0.0-10.0 mg/kg) reinstated extinguished drug-taking for both the cocaine- and MDMA-trained rats. In a separate group of cocaine-trained rats that received repeated exposure to 10.0 mg/kg MDMA, the initial exposure to MDMA (10.0 mg/kg, i.p.) failed to reinstate extinguished responding but MDMA became an effective prime for reinstatement of extinguished cocaine-taking behavior with repeated exposure. Effects of MDMA in MDMA-trained rats was greater than the effect in cocaine-trained rats suggesting that extensive experience with MDMA self-administration might have sensitized rats to this effect. These findings show that extinguished MDMA self-administration, like self-administration of other drugs of abuse, can be reinstated by exposure to psychostimulants thereby precipitating relapse. |
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Keywords: | MDMA Cocaine Self-administration Relapse Drug-seeking |
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