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Antagonism of a nicotine plus midazolam discriminative cue in rats
Authors:White J-A.W.  Stolerman I.P.
Affiliation:Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, UK.
Abstract:Rats were trained to discriminate nicotine (0.4mg/kg s.c.), midazolam (0.2mg/kg s.c.) or the combination of these drugs from saline (n = 10). The rats were trained to 95% accuracy in a two-bar operant procedure with a tandem schedule of food reinforcement. Testing with the individual drugs in the mixture-trained group showed that nicotine (85% drug-appropriate responding) was a more salient component than midazolam (47%) in the compound stimulus. The rats were tested with benzodiazepine and nicotine antagonists individually and in combination (mecamylamine 0.2-1.6mg/kg s.c.; flumazenil 2.5-20mg/kg i.p.). Results for the mixture-trained animals showed that flumazenil had no effect on its own, however mecamylamine on its own produced a significant but incomplete block in doses of 0.4-1.6mg/kg. The greater salience of the nicotine component of the cue would explain the block by mecamylamine but not flumazenil. The antagonists in combination produced greater blockade than mecamylamine on its own. The selectivity of the antagonist actions on the different cue components was also demonstrated. The results suggest that in drug discrimination experiments, "false negative" results may be obtained with antagonists when a training drug produces a stimulus with more than one component.
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