Similar behavioral and biochemical effects of long-term haloperidol and caerulein treatment in albino mice

Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior
E VasarA Lang

Abstract

Behavioral and biochemical experiments on male albino mice have revealed similar effects after the cessation of repeated (15 days) haloperidol (0.5 mg/kg daily IP) and caerulein (0.1 mg/kg daily SC) treatment. Tolerance developed to the action of muscimol (a GABA-A agonist, 1 mg/kg IP), caerulein (a CCK-8 agonist, 15 micrograms/kg SC) and flumazenil (a benzodiazepine antagonist, 10 mg/kg IP). Muscimol and caerulein were not able to suppress the motor activity of mice after 15 days treatment with haloperidol and caerulein. Flumazenil, which increased motor activity in saline-treated animals, also failed to affect activity after extended haloperidol or caerulein treatment. In contrast, the motor excitation induced by amphetamine (an indirect dopamine agonist, 3 mg/kg IP) was increased after haloperidol or caerulein administration. In radioligand binding studies the density of dopamine-2-receptors in striatum, opioid receptors in mesolimbic structures, and benzodiazepine and GABA-A receptors in brainstem was significantly elevated after long-term haloperidol or caerulein treatment. Simultaneously, the number of CCK-8, benzodiazepine and GABA-A receptors in cerebral cortex was decreased. It is probable that CCK-8-ergic mechanisms a...Continue Reading

References

Feb 1, 1978·The American Journal of Psychiatry·A Carlsson
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Jan 1, 1985·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·P De WitteJ J Vanderhaeghen
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Citations

Dec 1, 1992·European Neuropsychopharmacology : the Journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology·E VasarA Lang

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