Limitations To the Generality of Cocaine Locomotor Sensitization Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Repeated exposure to cocaine often leads to tolerance to effects on operant behavior, whereas sensitization often develops to effects on locomotor activity. The purpose of the present set of experiments was to examine if locomotor sensitization to cocaine would develop in the presence or absence of an operant contingency in rats. In Experiment 1, rats lever pressed on an FR schedule of reinforcement, and were administered chronic cocaine. Tolerance to effects of cocaine on lever pressing developed in most subjects. No subjects developed locomotor sensitization even when the operant contingency was removed. Experiment 2 examined effects of chronic cocaine administration in rats with no exposure to an operant contingency. Tolerance developed to locomotor effects of cocaine in some subjects, but none developed sensitization. In Experiment 3, rats were exposed to a shorter drug regimen, and given time off before a sensitization-test session. Some, but not all subjects showed locomotor sensitization during the test session. The present results, therefore, show that locomotor sensitization to cocaine is not an inevitable consequence of repeated exposure to the drug.

publication date

  • 2008-08-01

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC4458850

Web of Science ID

  • 000258360500002

grantCited

  • DA 004074
  • F31 DA 021452
  • K05 DA014249
  • R01 DA004074

PubMed ID

  • 18729682

start page

  • 282

end page

  • 292

volume

  • 16