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Intravenous self-administration of pentobarbital and ethanol in rats
Authors:V J DeNoble  P C Mele  J H Porter
Affiliation:Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Psychology, 810 W. Franklin Street Richmond, VA 23284, USA
Abstract:Rats provided with unlimited access to intravenous doses of ethanol (30, 60, 90, 180, and 360 mg/kg/infusion) failed to initiate and maintain lever pressing that resulted in ethanol delivery. When pentobarbital (0.5 mg/kg/infusion) was substituted for ethanol, lever pressing increased. There were three indications of the positive reinforcing effects of pentobarbital: (1) a greater number of lever presses occurred when pentobarbital was response-contingent than when saline was available; (2) a greater number of responses were made on the pentobarbital lever than on a control "activity" lever; and (3) systematic changes in lever pressing were a function of pentobarbital dose (0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/kg/infusion). Sequential substitution of ethanol (30, 90, 360 mg/kg/infusion) for pentobarbital failed to maintain lever pressing. However, access to combinations of ethanol (1, 3, 10, 30, 60 mg/kg/infusion) and a nonreinforcing dose of pentobarbital (0.125 or 0.25 mg/kg/infusion) did maintain lever pressing. As the dose of ethanol increased, the daily number of infusions first increased then decreased. Following a history of self-administration of ethanol-pentobarbital combinations, a retest of ethanol alone (10 or 30 mg/kg/infusions) followed by pentobarbital alone (0.125 or 0.25 mg/kg/infusion) failed to maintain lever pressing.
Keywords:Self-administration  Drug history  Pentobarbital  Ethanol  Drug interactions  Positive reinforcers  Rat
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