G. Laviola et al., COCAINE SENSITIZATION IN PERIADOLESCENT AND ADULT-RATS, The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 275(1), 1995, pp. 345-357
Periadolescent rats have been reported to be affected differentially b
y catecholaminergic agents when compared with younger or adult animals
. The present study evaluated the behavioral responsivity of periadole
scent (34- to 39-day-old) and adult (60- to 70-day-old) Sprague-Dawley
rats of both sexes to i.p, cocaine (Coc) administration (0, 10 or 20
mg/kg, once daily for 4 days). All animals received injections of both
saline and Coc every day paired with a different context, with one-ha
lf of the animals receiving the drug in the home cage (Coc-Home) and t
he other half in the testing chamber (Coc-Test). Forty-eight hours aft
er the last drug injection, all animals were challenged with 10 mg/kg
i.p, of Coo, and their behavior in the test chamber was scored. As exp
ected, acute Coc induced a prominent increase in a number of behaviors
, and this response profile was less marked in periadolescent relative
to adult animals. In contrast, Coc-Test animals of both ages showed a
clear behavioral sensitization relative to the chronic saline group.
No evidence of carry-over effects was found in Coo-Home animals. Femal
es were in general more sensitive than males to acute Coc effects. The
development of behavioral sensitization to Coc was a function of age-
specific alterations in sensitivity to psychostimulants. Periadolescen
t rats of both sexes showed sensitization to the locomotor activating
effects (matrix crossings) of Coc, whereas a consistent sensitization
profile for both stereotyped head scanning and focused sniffing activi
ties were found in adults but not in periadolescents. Chronic Coc redu
ced body weight and food consumption, particularly in adult males, whe
reas it did not affect periadolescent patterns. No evidence of sensiti
zation to Coc was found in the hormonal parameters considered.