Gr. Dawson et al., EVIDENCE THAT THE ANXIOLYTIC-LIKE EFFECTS OF CHLORDIAZEPOXIDE ON THE ELEVATED PLUS-MAZE ARE CONFOUNDED BY INCREASES IN LOCOMOTOR-ACTIVITY, Psychopharmacology, 118(3), 1995, pp. 316-323
In exploratory animal models of anxiety, such as the elevated plus maz
e, the anxiogenic- and anxiolytic-like effects of drugs may be confoun
ded by changes in locomotor activity. In the present experiments, the
sensitivity of several measures of anxiety and locomotor activity in t
he elevated plus maze were assessed. Both chlordiazepoxide hydrochlori
de (CDP, 7.5 mg/kg) and d-amphetamine sulphate (AMP, 0.75, 1.5 mg/kg)
increased the percent time on the open arms and doses of 7.5 mg/kg and
1.5 mg/kg CDP and AMP, respectively, increased the number of entries
into the open arms. The increase in these measures might suggest that
both compounds induced an anxiolytic-like effect. Although FG 7142 (30
.0 mg/kg) did not decrease the number of entries to the open arms, it
did decrease the time on the open arms, which might suggest that it ha
d anxiogenic-like effects. Similarly, buspirone reduced both the numbe
r of entries into the open arms and the time spent on the open arms. H
owever, all the compounds significantly affected locomotor activity. C
DP (3.0 and 7.5 mg/kg) increased the total number of arm entries, the
distance travelled on the open arms and the mean speed of the animals
on the open, and in the closed arms. Moreover, the distance travelled
by the animals in the closed arms was increased by 1.0 mg/kg CDP, a do
se that had no measurable effects on the indices of anxiety. Similarly
, although AMP failed to increase the total number of arm entries, it
did increase the distance travelled in the closed arms (0.75 and 1.5 m
g/kg), on the open arms (1.5 mg/kg) and the speed of the animals in th
e closed arms (1.5 mg/kg), a measure that is independent of the time s
pent in the closed arms. By contrast, both FG 7142 (30.0 mg/kg) and bu
spirone decreased the total number of arm entries (0.3-8.0 mg/kg), the
speed of the animals in the closed arms and the distance travelled in
the closed arms (1.0-4.0 mg/kg). These experiments suggest that: (i)
the anxiogenic- and anxiolytic-like effects of drugs in the elevated p
lus-maze are confounded by changes in locomotor activity and that ''to
tal arm entries'' is a relatively insensitive measure of drug-induced
changes in locomotor activity; (ii) psychostimulant compounds, such as
AMP, at doses that increase locomotor activity have an anxiolytic-lik
e profile in the elevated plus maze and (iii) the measurement of speed
of movement is a more sensitive index of changes in locomotor activit
y than the conventional measure of ''total arm entries''.