Date of Award

1980

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science (M.S.)

Department

Graduate Studies

First Advisor

James Blankenship

First Committee Member

Katherine K. Knapp

Second Committee Member

Roseann Hannon

Third Committee Member

Marvin H. Malone

Abstract

The present study ln male Wistar rats was designed to rate and analyze six specific cocaine-induced behaviors. These behavioral parameters have been defined by others as either dopaminergic (sniffing, grooming, and locomotor activity) or serotonergic (repetitive head movements, rearing, and Straub tail) in origin.

Results were analyzed by analysis of variance in two ways : (i) as grouped dopaminergic or serotonergic scores, and (ii) as the net behavioral index (dopaminergic scores minus the serotonergic scores). The purpose of approaching the data in this way was to attempt to define the behavioral interactions of the two neurotransmitters.

One conclusion that developed from this study was the indication that dopaminergic behaviors peak at lower doses of cocaine than do serotonergic behaviors. This relationship held true for all the individual parameters in addition to the dopaminergic and serotonergic totals.

A dopaminergic blocker, haloperidol, significantly attenuated all responses elicited by cocaine. When the net behavioral index was analyzed, it was found that the response of the median dose of cocaine was significantly altered from a net dopaminergic score towards a net serotonergic score. In this sense, haloperidol was shown to have the capacity to attenuate dopaminergic-associated parameters to a greater extent than the serotonergic-associated parameters.

Cyproheptadine, an antiserotonergic agent, did not significantly affect the net behavioral index; however, this compound did significantly increase the dopaminergic parameter of grooming at the high doses of cocaine and cyproheptadine. Also at this dose combination , gnawing was elicited -- a dopaminergic response seen under no other experimental conditions. Due to the antiserotonergic agent causing an increase in the dopaminergic parameters of grooming and gnawing, it is proposed that the serotonergic influence on these two dopaminergic behaviors is of an inhibitory type.

Pages

97

Included in

Chemistry Commons

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