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Vol. 280, Issue 1, 284-291, 1997
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College
of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
A model has been developed in which acute cocaine administration
results in an enhanced T-dependent antibody response to sheep erythrocytes. This enhancement occurs when cocaine (30 mg/kg, twice in
1 day) is administered 1 or 2 days before sensitization with antigen,
in mice older than 16 wk. Acute cocaine has been shown to elicit a rise
in serum corticosterone, and the administration of exogenous
corticosterone, under similar conditions as cocaine, also results in a
similar immunoenhancement. Further evidence in support of a role by
corticosterone is the lack of an enhancement in adrenalectomized mice
and the ability of
-helical corticotropin releasing factor to block
the enhancement by cocaine. The role of concomitant epinephrine release
from the adrenal was addressed by adrenal demedullation. Eliminating
epinephrine, but not corticosterone release, had no effect on the
cocaine-induced immunoenhancement. The evidence presented provides
support for a major role by corticosterone in mediating cocaine's
effects on at least one measure of immune function, the T-dependent
antibody response.
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