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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 277-284, April 1998
Psychobiology Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Intramural
Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland
Chronic cocaine administration can produce tolerance or sensitization
to locomotor activating effects, depending on the treatment paradigm.
The effects of chronic, continuous cocaine were measured on locomotor
activity for 1 hr daily for 7 days. Cocaine produced significant
increases in locomotor activity 4 hr after osmotic minipumps were
implanted, and an even higher level of activity after 24 hr. This was
likely a rapid sensitization to the locomotor activating effects of
cocaine, because neither brain nor plasma levels of cocaine were
significantly altered over the treatment period. By day 4, activity
levels diminished, but remained significantly higher than in
saline-treated animals. Twenty-four hr after pump removal, there were
no changes in dopamine D1 or D2 receptor
binding, or in dopamine-stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity in
either caudate putamen or nucleus accumbens of cocaine-treated animals. Chronic naltrexone produced a slight, nonsignificant decrease in
locomotor activity and when combined with cocaine, produced the same
pattern of activity as cocaine alone, but with slightly less
stimulation on all days. Morphine produced a smaller increase in
activity than cocaine that remained constant throughout the treatment
week. Cocaine with morphine was additive, producing greater activity
and less tolerance than cocaine alone. Thus, continuous cocaine
administration produces a rapid sensitization that is lost over the
course of the treatment period, yet does not produce any immediate
alterations in dopamine receptors or regulation of adenylyl cyclase.
The pattern of behavior is not altered by an opioid antagonist, while
the sensitization period appears to be prolonged in the presence of an
opioid agonist.