Abstract.
Rationale: A number of studies have suggested that the continued presentation of stimuli associated with cocaine may contribute to drug-seeking and drug-taking. The influence of conditioned stimuli on the maintenance of self-administration has not, however, been systematically investigated. Objectives: This study was designed to determine whether omission of a stimulus that had been paired with self-administered cocaine would influence the maintenance of cocaine self-administration and whether the effect was dependent on cocaine dose or session length. Methods: During self-administration training, self-administered cocaine infusions were always paired with the illumination of a light. On test days, self-administered cocaine was delivered either with or without the cocaine-associated cue. For one group of rats, responding maintained by cocaine (0.50 mg/kg per infusion) was measured during daily 18-h sessions. For other groups, responding maintained by additional doses of cocaine (0.125, 0.25, or 1.0 mg/kg per infusion) was measured during daily 8-h sessions. For a final group, daily test sessions (4–5 h) produced the dose-effect curve (0.015–1.0 mg/kg per infusion) by repeatedly reducing the cocaine dose from a starting dose of 1.0 mg/kg per infusion. Results: Removal of the light cue decreased cocaine self-administration. The magnitude of this effect was dependent on the dose of self-administered cocaine and on the test session duration. Greater decrements in responding were produced as session length increased or when low doses of cocaine were self-administered. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that in the absence of a cocaine-associated stimulus, cocaine self-administration is attenuated and that maintenance of cocaine self-administration is maximally affected by the presence or absence of the conditioned stimulus when the self-administered dose is low and/or when session duration is long.
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Schenk, S., Partridge, B. Influence of a conditioned light stimulus on cocaine self-administration in rats. Psychopharmacology 154, 390–396 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002130000608
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002130000608