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Vol. 291, Issue 2, 576-582, November 1999
Department of Pharmacology and Substance Abuse Institute of North
Texas, University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth,
Fort Worth, Texas
This study investigated sex differences in responding to the
pentylenetetrazol (PTZ, a
-aminobutyric acid A antagonist)
discriminative stimulus and to substitution to PTZ during ethanol
withdrawal. The PTZ stimulus has served as an anxiogenic stimulus in
numerous studies. Adult male and female rats were trained to
discriminate PTZ (16 mg/kg i.p.) from saline in a two-lever
food-reinforced task. They were then gonadectomized or sham-operated.
Ovariectomized (OVX) rats were also tested during 17
-estradiol (2.5 mg, 21 days release, s.c.) replacement. The PTZ dose response (0-16
mg/kg i.p.) was tested in all groups. In general, fewer females than males responded to PTZ. Diazepam (DZP; 0-10 mg/kg i.p.) injected before PTZ (16 mg/kg) decreased the number of rats selecting the PTZ
lever. This effect was greater in sham female and
estradiol-replaced-OVX rats than in male or OVX rats. Rats then
received chronic ethanol diet (6.5%) for 10 days. During ethanol
withdrawal (12 h after termination of the ethanol diet), they were
tested for PTZ lever selection. PTZ lever selection differed between
groups: sham or castrated male rats > OVX > sham female or
estradiol-replaced-OVX rats. In sham female rats, estradiol
concentrations showed a cyclic pattern with an estradiol surge that did
not influence their PTZ discrimination performance. After i.p.
injection of ethanol (2 g/kg), blood ethanol concentrations were not
different in male and female rats. These findings suggest that 1)
female rats are less sensitive to the anxiogenic effects of PTZ; 2)
female rats are less sensitive to the anxiogenic effects of ethanol
withdrawal; and 3) estrogen plays some role in mediation of these sex differences.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. E. Jung, M. B. Gatch, and J. W. Simpkins Estrogen Neuroprotection Against the Neurotoxic Effects of Ethanol Withdrawal: Potential Mechanisms Experimental Biology and Medicine, January 1, 2005; 230(1): 8 - 22. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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