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Vol. 295, Issue 3, 1101-1111, December 2000
Preclinical Pharmacology Laboratory, National Institute on Drug
Abuse, Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health,
Baltimore, Maryland
Caffeine is a common psychoactive constituent of coffee, carbonated
beverages, and over-the-counter medications. This study examined the
effects of chronic caffeine exposure on the behavioral response to
acute administrations of psychostimulant drugs on ambulatory activity
and on the pharmacological characteristics of nicotine discrimination
in rats. Rats were maintained continuously on caffeine added to the
drinking water at a concentration of 0.25 or 1.0 mg/ml that resulted in
plasma caffeine concentrations ranging from 0.37 to 5.95 µg/ml. Rats
maintained on tap water served as control groups. Exposure to the lower
caffeine concentration (0.25 mg/ml) potentiated stimulatory effects of
nicotine, amphetamine, and cocaine on ambulatory activity and failed to
produce tolerance to the acute stimulatory effects of caffeine. In
contrast, exposure to the higher caffeine concentration (1.0 mg/ml) did
not alter the effects of the psychomotor stimulants on ambulatory
behaviors but resulted in the development of complete, insurmountable
tolerance to the acute stimulatory effects of caffeine. In the nicotine discrimination paradigm (0.4 mg/kg, training dose, a fixed-ratio 10 schedule of food delivery in a two-lever choice paradigm), rats exposed
to the lower, but not to the higher, caffeine concentration acquired
the nicotine discrimination significantly faster and were more
sensitive to the effects of amphetamine and cocaine in substitution
tests than water-drinking rats. Caffeine exposure did not change
pharmacokinetic properties of nicotine (i.e., plasma levels,
metabolism). In summary, exposure to two different caffeine solutions
within a range of plasma levels observed in humans resulted in
quantitatively distinct changes in psychostimulant-induced nonoperant
and operant measures of behavior. These results suggest that dietary
consumption of moderate doses of caffeine may be associated with
enhanced reactions to some psychostimulants.