Abstract
The present study compared the discriminative stimulus effects of the imidazopyridine, zolpidem, with a triazolobenzodiazepine, triazolam, in pentobarbital-trained rhesus monkeys and rats. Rhesus monkeys (n = 4), trained to discriminate pentobarbital (10 mg/kg intragastric [i.g.]) from saline under a FR 1 discrete-trials shock avoidance procedure, were given zolpidem (0.10–30 mg/kg i.g.) or triazolam (0.01–0.3 mg/kg i.g.). Both zolpidem and triazolam produced dose-dependent increases in pentobarbital-appropriate responding that reached 80% or greater at the highest doses tested. Zolpidem, but not triazolam, increased latency to respond in a dose-dependent manner. Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 12), trained to discriminate pentobarbital (8.0 mg/kg i.p.) from saline under a FR 10 schedule of food reinforcement, were given zolpidem (0.50–4.0 mg/kg i.p.; 5-, 15- and 45-min pretreatment) or triazolam (0.025–0.20 mg/kg i.p., 15-min pretreatment). Zolpidem occasioned intermediate drug-appropriate responding (maximum group mean = 46%) at the 5- and 15-min pretreatment times and no drug-appropriate responding at the 45-min pretreatment time. In contrast, triazolam occasioned ≥80% pentobarbital-appropriate responding at 0.10 and 0.20 mg/kg. Both zolpidem and triazolam produced dose-dependent decreases in the rate of responding. The rate-decreasing effects of zolpidem were maximal at the 5-min pretreatment time and had dissipated after the 45-min pretreatment time. Further studies were conducted in rats to equate procedural variables between the monkey and rat studies. When the FR was reduced from 10 to 1, zolpidem occasioned 26 to 62% pentobarbital-appropriate responding over a dose range of 1.0 to 6.0 mg/kg i.p. After i.g. administration, zolpidem occasioned 100% drug-appropriate responding at the highest dose tested (6.0 mg/kg); however, only two of seven rats responded. Taken together, these data raise the possibility of a species difference between nonhuman primates and rats in the pentobarbital-like discriminative stimulus effects of zolpidem.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: William L. Woolverton, Ph.D., Dept. of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Univ. of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 North State Street, Jackson, MS 39216.
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↵1 This work was supported by National Institute on Drug Abuse Grant DA-09139 and by the College on Problems of Drug Dependence.
- Abbreviations:
- BZ
- benzodiazepine
- CNS
- central nervous system
- FR
- fixed ratio
- GABA
- γ-aminobutyric acid
- i.g.
- intragastric
- Received March 15, 1996.
- Accepted September 23, 1996.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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