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Persistence of a hyperthermic sign-reversal during nitrous oxide inhalation despite cue-exposure treatment with and without a drug-onset cue
We asked whether chronic tolerance and the hyperthermic sign-reversal induced by repeated 60% N(2)O exposures could be extinguished using a cue-exposure paradigm. Rats received 18 N(2)O administrations in a total calorimetry system that simultaneously measures core temperature (Tc), metabolic heat p...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Taylor & Francis
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4416485/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25938128 http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/23328940.2014.944811 |
Sumario: | We asked whether chronic tolerance and the hyperthermic sign-reversal induced by repeated 60% N(2)O exposures could be extinguished using a cue-exposure paradigm. Rats received 18 N(2)O administrations in a total calorimetry system that simultaneously measures core temperature (Tc), metabolic heat production (HP), and body heat loss (HL). Each exposure entailed a 2-h baseline period followed by a 1.5-h N(2)O exposure. The 18 drug exposures induced a robust intra-administration hyperthermia in which the initial hypothermic effect of N(2)O inverted to a significant hyperthermic sign-reversal during N(2)O inhalation due primarily to an acquired robust increase in HP. The rats were then randomized to one of 3 extinction procedures (n = 8/procedure) over a 20-d interval: 1) a N(2)O-abstinent home-cage group (HC) that received only the usual animal care; 2) a cue-exposure group (CEXP) in which the animals were placed in the calorimeter 8 times but received no N(2)O; and 3) a drug-onset-cue group (DOC) in which animals received a brief N(2)O exposure in the calorimeter that mimicked the first 3 min of an actual 60% N(2)O trial. Following the extinction sessions, all rats received a 60% N(2)O test trial and Tc, HP and HL were assessed. The hyperthermic sign-reversal remained fully intact during the test trial, with no significant differences observed among groups in any post-baseline change in any thermal outcome. These data suggest that cue exposure may not be an efficacious strategy to reduce sign-reversals that develop with chronic drug use. |
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