Abstract

Studies on the reinstatement of drug-seeking after withdrawal from chronic drug self-administration have varied in terms of the procedures by which animals are initially trained to self-administer the drug. The current study directly compared whether prior operant training for food pellet reinforcement and/or maintained dietary restriction significantly altered the reinstatement of extinguished cocaine-seeking in the presence of cocaine-paired cues, a priming injection of cocaine (10 mg/kg; i.p.), and the pharmacological stressor, yohimbine (1.25 or 2.5 mg/kg, i.p.). Male Long Evans rats were divided into four groups as follows: a) trained to lever press for food pellets prior to cocaine self-administration and then maintained on a restricted diet, b) trained to lever press for food pellets prior to cocaine self-administration and then placed on an ad libitum diet, c) untrained and maintained on a restricted diet, or d) untrained and placed on ad libitum feeding. All rats readily self-administered cocaine (0.2 mg/50 μl/infusion) and were subsequently extinguished in the absence of cocaine or previously cocaine-paired cues (light + tone). Following extinction, rats experienced cue-, cocaine-, and yohimbine-induced reinstatement testing. No significant differences were seen between groups for lever responding during the maintenance phase and during extinction. Likewise, reinstatement of cocaine-seeking did not vary across groups for cue-, cocaine-, or yohimbine-induced reinstatement. Under these specific parameters, operant training prior to cocaine self-administration and/or dietary restriction do not significantly alter reinstatement of cocaine-seeking. The results arguably support the approach of not using prior lever training with a non-drug reinforcer and to limit the use of dietary restriction only to the acquisition phase of drug self-administration.

Full Text
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