Amphetamine affects the extinction of self-stimulation differently in prefrontal cortex and posterior hypothalamus of rats |
| |
Authors: | C H West R P Michael |
| |
Institution: | Department of Psychiatry, Emory University School of Medicine, Georgia Mental Health Institute, Atlanta 30306. |
| |
Abstract: | The effects of amphetamine on the extinction of intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) and on postextinction ICSS performance were examined in rats implanted with electrodes either in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) or in the posterior hypothalamus-ventral tegmental area (PH-VTA). Lever-pressing for ICSS was allowed to stabilize in daily 15-minute sessions before each animal was exposed to 5 minutes of extinction (responding without reward). Animals were administered either 0.25 mg/kg d-amphetamine or saline before baseline, extinction and postextinction sessions. After amphetamine treatment, the number of lever presses during extinction was higher in mPFC animals and lower in PH-VTA animals compared with saline-treated controls. Rates did not change immediately after extinction but, one day later, rates had increased in all saline-treated animals (both PH-VTA and mPFC animals) and had decreased in all amphetamine-treated animals. These findings demonstrated that the effects of amphetamine on the extinction of ICSS were different in cortical and hypothalamic sites, possibly because of regional differences in stimulus-evoked reinforcement and inhibitory processes. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|