Abstract
Rats treated continuously for 4 months with haloperidol (1.4–1.6 mg/kg/day), trifluoperazine (4.5–5.1 mg/kg/day), or sulpiride (102–110 mg/kg/day), but not clozapine (23–26 mg/kg/day), exhibited an increased frequency of chewing jaw movements. Chewing in both control and haloperidol-treated rats was increased by acute administration of the cholinergic agents pilocarpine or physostigmine. Physostigmine or pilocarpine also induced abnormal gaping jaw movements; physostigmine-induced gaping was more prevalent in haloperidol-treated rats than control rats receiving physostigmine alone.
Acute administration of the anticholinergic agents scopolamine and atropine decreased chewing in control animals and reduced haloperidol-induced chewing to control values or below. The effects of these cholinergic manipulations suggest that neuroleptic-induced perioral responses in rats do not resemble tardive dyskinesia in man.
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Rupniak, N.M.J., Jenner, P. & Marsden, C.D. Cholinergic manipulation of perioral behaviour induced by chronic neuroleptic administration to rats. Psychopharmacology 79, 226–230 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00427817
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00427817