Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior
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Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. · Jul 1990
Scopolamine produces locomotor stereotypy in an open field but apomorphine does not.
Both dopaminergic and nondopaminergic drugs produce hyperlocomotion in rats. Dopaminergic drugs also produce focused stereotypy (absence of locomotion and intense sniffing or licking/biting of a restricted area of the environment). Some drugs produce repetitive routes of locomotion; this phenomenon might represent a combination of hyperlocomotion and stereotypy. ⋯ Scopolamine (0.5 and 2.0 mg/kg) produced locomotor stereotypy at both doses. Apomorphine (1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 mg/kg) failed to reliably produce locomotor stereotypy. Thus, there is not necessarily a relationship between the ability of a drug to produce focused stereotypy and the ability of the drug to produce locomotor stereotypy.
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Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. · Jul 1990
Butorphanol's efficacy at mu and kappa opioid receptors: inferences based on the schedule-controlled behavior of nontolerant and morphine-tolerant rats and on the responding of rats under a drug discrimination procedure.
The purpose of the present investigation was to characterize the mu agonist and kappa antagonist effects of the mixed opioid agonist/antagonist butorphanol. To this end, the effects of butorphanol were examined: 1) alone and in combination with the kappa agonist bremazocine in nontolerant and morphine-tolerant rats responding under a fixed-ratio 30 (FR30) schedule of food presentation, and 2) in rats trained to discriminate 10 mg/kg morphine from saline. Prior to the induction of morphine tolerance, morphine, bremazocine and butorphanol produced dose-dependent decreases in rate of responding under the FR30. ⋯ In these morphine-tolerant rats, butorphanol produced a dose-dependent antagonism of bremazocine's rate-decreasing effects. In rats trained to discriminate morphine from saline, butorphanol substituted completely for the morphine stimulus. Unlike morphine, which produced its stimulus effects only at doses that decreased rate of responding, butorphanol substituted for the morphine stimulus at doses that had little or no effect on rate of responding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)