Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9406639 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Context-dependent behavioural sensitization to nicotine develops faster and is more robust than context-independent sensitization. However, some findings suggest that behavioural sensitization develops irrespective of context. In this study an attempt was made to dissociate the development of context-dependent nicotine sensitization from the onset of nicotine-conditioned locomotor stimulation. Seven days of daily nicotine administration (0.6Â mg/kg, s.c.) paired with exposure to locomotor activity boxes produced stable and consistent behavioural sensitization, at which time no nicotine-induced conditioned locomotor stimulation could be demonstrated. However, after an additional two days of nicotine treatment, i.e. on day 9, nicotine-conditioned behavioural stimulation was observed. Our findings suggest that behavioural sensitization to nicotine appears to reach a plateau before induction of nicotine-conditioned locomotor stimulation.
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Authors
Alexander Robert Kosowski, Sture Liljequist,