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Vol. 281, Issue 3, 1330-1339, 1997
Psychology Department, Durham University, Science Laboratories,
South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, U.K. 1Department of Pharmacology,
School of Medical Sciences, Bristol, BS8 1TD United Kingdom
The effects of amphetamine and cocaine on locomotor activity in mice
were studied after 3 weeks of chronic administration of ethanol by
liquid diet. When testing was started 24 h after cessation of the
ethanol treatment, no differences were seen on the first administration
between the effects of the psychostimulants in controls and
ethanol-treated animals, but after subsequent daily injections of
amphetamine and cocaine, at doses that were insufficient to cause
sensitization in controls, sensitization to both of these drugs was
seen in ethanol-treated mice. When testing was started on the sixth day
after cessation of the ethanol treatment, the effects of amphetamine on
the first administration were significantly greater in ethanol-treated
animals than in controls. After subsequent repeated daily injections,
the locomotor stimulant effects of cocaine were greater in
ethanol-treated mice than in controls. Administration of amphetamine
for the first time 2 months after cessation of ethanol treatment also
had a greater stimulant effect, compared with that in control animals. Two months after cessation of ethanol treatment, the first dose of
cocaine caused a locomotor stimulation that was not seen in control
animals, but sensitization was not seen after repeated cocaine
administration in either group of animals. No differences in the
effects of amphetamine or cocaine were seen after only 7 days of
ethanol treatment. The results indicate that changes are still present
in the CNS long after ethanol withdrawal hyperexcitability has subsided
and that these changes result in increases in the effects of
amphetamine and cocaine. Analysis of brain concentrations of the two
psychostimulants suggested that metabolic changes were not responsible
for the differing effects in control and ethanol-treated animals. It is
possible that alterations in mesolimbic dopamine transmission are
responsible for the effects of the ethanol treatment.
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