Te. Fitch et Dcs. Roberts, THE EFFECTS OF DOSE AND ACCESS RESTRICTIONS ON THE PERIODICITY OF COCAINE SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN THE RAT, Drug and alcohol dependence, 33(2), 1993, pp. 119-128
Cocaine self-administration in rats was tested under various dose and
frequency of access restrictions. In the continuous access condition,
groups of rats were given continuous, unlimited access to one of three
doses of cocaine (1.5, 0.5, and 0.2 mg/kg/infusion) for a duration of
10 days. In the discrete trials condition, a group of rats were given
the opportunity to self-administer a single cocaine infusion (1.5 mg/
kg) within a discrete, 10 min access trial. The rats received a contin
uous series of these trials for a duration of 7 - 10 days at one of th
ree frequencies (1, 2 or 4 trials/h). Results suggest that when access
is restricted to four access trials/h, or to a median dose range (0.5
mg/kg per infusion), rats will self-administer cocaine in a cyclical
manner over extended, infradian periodicities without developing outwa
rd signs of ill health. This contrasts with previous studies where ext
ended, unlimited access schedules have resulted in toxicity and overdo
se. It is suggested that dose and frequency of access restrictions may
be employed in order to develop new animal models of cocaine self-adm
inistration which examine the factors underlying the reinitiation of e
xtended periods of cocaine intake. Such models may be useful in testin
g interventions with the potential to disrupt cyclical patterns of coc
aine self-administration.