Aa. Hegarty et Wh. Vogel, THE EFFECT OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC DIAZEPAM TREATMENT ON STRESS-INDUCED CHANGES IN CORTICAL DOPAMINE IN THE RAT, Pharmacology, biochemistry and behavior, 52(4), 1995, pp. 771-778
The mesocortical dopamine system is thought to play an important role
in the etiology of the stress response. Dopamine (DA) has been shown t
o accumulate in the rat frontal cortex in response to a wide variety o
f stressors. Diazepam, an anxiolytic benzodiazepine, can reverse the e
ffects of stress on cortical DA. We investigated the effects of acute
and chronic diazepam administration on immobilization stress-induced c
hanges of the DA system in the frontal cortex of the rat. In the first
study, 2.5 mg/kg diazepam was administered 20 min prior to 40 min of
immobilization stress. Acute diazepam significantly reduced basal leve
ls of extracellular DA and antagonized the stress-induced increase in
cortical DA when compared to untreated stressed rats. Acute diazepam d
id not significantly effect extracellular DOPAC. In the second study,
an experimental group of rats was given approximately 2 mg/kg/day diaz
epam in their drinking water for 3 weeks. This treatment significantly
reduced anxiety as assessed by a staircase test for anxiety. Chronic
diazepam had no effect on basal levels of cortical DA. However, chroni
c diazepam treatment also attenuated stress-induced increases in extra
cellular DA when compared to untreated stressed control rats. Chronic
diazepam did not affect stress-induced changes in DOPAC but it did ant
agonize the effects of stress on HVA. Thus, acute and chronic diazepam
treatment can antagonize stress-induced activation of the mesocortica
l DA system. It is proposed that this effect is produced through an en
hancement of GABAergic neurotransmission by diazepam. The role of the
dopaminergic system during stress, anxiety, and schizophrenia is discu
ssed.