Testosterone reinforcement : intravenous and intracerebroventricular self-administration in male rats and hamsters


Autoria(s): Wood, Ruth I.; Johnson, Luke R.; Chu, Lucy; Schad, Christina; Self, David W.
Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Rationale: Anabolic steroids are drugs of abuse. However, the potential for addiction remains unclear. Testosterone induces conditioned place preference in rats and oral self-administration in hamsters. Objectives: To determine if male rats and hamsters consume testosterone by intravenous (IV) or intracerebroventricular (ICV) self- administration. Methods: With each nose-poke in the active hole during daily 4-h tests in an operant condi- tioning chamber, gonad-intact adult rats and hamsters received 50 mg testosterone in an aqueous solution of b-cyclodextrin via jugular cannula. The inactive nose- poke hole served as a control. Additional hamsters received vehicle infusions. Results: Rats (n=7) expressed a significant preference for the active nose-poke hole (10.0€2.8 responses/4 h) over the inactive hole (4.7€1.2 responses/4 h). Similarly, during 16 days of testosterone self-administration IV, hamsters (n=9) averaged 11.7€2.9 responses/4 h and 6.3€1.1 responses/4 h in the active and inactive nose-poke holes, respectively. By contrast, vehicle controls (n=8) failed to develop a preference for the active nose-poke hole (6.5€0.5 and 6.4€0.3 responses/4 h). Hamsters (n=8) also self-administered 1 mg testosterone ICV (active hole:39.8€6.0 nose-pokes/ 4 h; inactive hole: 22.6€7.1 nose-pokes/4 h). When testosterone was replaced with vehicle, nose-poking in the active hole declined from 31.1€7.6 to 11.9€3.2 responses/ 4 h within 6 days. Likewise, reversing active and inactive holes increased nose-poking in the previously inactive hole from 9.1€1.9 to 25.6€5.4 responses/4 h. However, reducing the testosterone dose from 1 mg to 0.2 mg per 1 ml injection did not change nose-poking. Conclu- sions: Compared with other drugs of abuse, testosterone reinforcement is modest. Nonetheless, these data support the hypothesis that testosterone is reinforcing.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/67972/

Publicador

Springer

Relação

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00213-003-1587-7

DOI:10.1007/s00213-003-1587-7

Wood, Ruth I., Johnson, Luke R., Chu, Lucy, Schad, Christina, & Self, David W. (2004) Testosterone reinforcement : intravenous and intracerebroventricular self-administration in male rats and hamsters. Psychopharmacology, 171(3), pp. 298-305.

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Psychology & Counselling

Palavras-Chave #110900 NEUROSCIENCES #Androgens #Self-administration #Operant behavior #Testosterone #Hamsters #Rats #Intravenous #Intracerebroventricular
Tipo

Journal Article