Artigo Revisado por pares

Dopamine levels in the striatum and the effect of alcohol and reserpine

1977; Elsevier BV; Volume: 26; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0006-2952(77)90043-0

ISSN

1873-2968

Autores

Isabel J. Wajda, Issac Manigault, James P. Hudick,

Tópico(s)

Neurological and metabolic disorders

Resumo

KUZIEMKA-ŁȨSKA, M., H. CAR, AND K. WIŚNIEWSKI. The effect of baclofen and AII 3–7 on learning and memory processes in rats chronically treated with ethanol. PHARMACOL BIOCHEM BEHAV 62(1) 39–43, 1999.—The aim of this study was to determine the possible influence of baclofen, an agonist of the GABAB receptor on behavioral activity (recall, acquisition of conditioned reflexes) of angiotensin II fragment 3–7 (AII 3–7) in rats chronically treated with ethanol. Long-term (9 weeks) ethanol intoxication profoundly impaired learning and memory processes in all tests used. The GABAB receptor agonist baclofen (0.75 mg/kg IP) did not influence exploratory and motor activity in the control rats, but we observed a tendency (without significance) to decrease the psychomotor activity in the alcohol-intoxicated groups of animals, when it was injected together with AII 3–7 (2 μg ICV). Baclofen did not influence the retrieval process in the passive avoidance recall, and when it was given together with AII 3–7 did not change the positive action of this fragment in control groups, but significantly enhanced its action in the animals chronically treated with ethanol. Baclofen showed significant improvement of acquisition in the active avoidance test only in the alcohol-intoxicated groups. Baclofen, injected together with AII 3–7, yielded important attenuation action of AII 3–7 in the control groups in the first 3 days of test, but did not produce any changes during the fourth and fifth day of the experiment. Baclofen did not provoke any changes in activity of AII 3–7 (when it was injected together) in the acquisition of the active avoidance test in the alcohol-intoxicated groups of animals.

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