Nucleus accumbens as a substrate for the aversive stimulus effects of opiate withdrawal

Male Reinforcement Schedule Time Factors Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Morphine Naloxone Rats, Inbred Strains Nucleus Accumbens Rats Substance Withdrawal Syndrome Quaternary Ammonium Compounds 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Animals Conditioning, Operant Septal Nuclei Reinforcement, Psychology Injections, Intraventricular
DOI: 10.1007/bf00441954 Publication Date: 2004-11-12T03:02:39Z
ABSTRACT
Previous studies from our laboratory using methylnaloxonium, a hydrophilic antagonist, showed that opiate receptors in the region of the nucleus accumbens are important for the acute reinforcing effects of heroin in non-dependent rats. A similar increased sensitivity to the response disruptive effects of intracerebrally injected methylnaloxonium in opiate dependent rats was observed in a fixed-ratio (FR) baseline of operant behaviors. These results suggest that the same opiate receptors in the region of the nucleus accumbens important for the positive reinforcing stimulus properties of opiates may also be responsible for the response disruptive, aversive stimulus properties of opiate withdrawal. These results also suggest that the neural substrates of some aspects of dependence may be partly related to those of the reinforcing effects of opiates. In particular, it is hypothesized that "euphoria" and "dysphoria" induced by opiates may reflect opponent motivational processes operating at a cellular level within the nucleus accumbens.
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