Abstract

Rats chronically treated with diazepam (DZM) (2 mg/kg/day i.p.) for 21 days, were subsequently tested at 24, 48, 72 and 96 h after the last injection in the elevated plus-maze. When compared with their respective controls, withdrawn animals showed an anxiogenic response since they exhibited a significant decrease in the % of time spent in the open arms, and a reduction in open and total arms entries at 24 and 48 h following the last benzodiazepine administration. No other behavioral differences were observed in the remaining groups. Ninety-six hours following DZM withdrawal, when the anxiogenic response was no longer evident, withdrawn rats showed a significant decrease in immobility time when exposed to a forced-swim test (FST). GABA stimulation of chloride uptake in cortical tissue was measured in BDZ-withdrawn rats or vehicle-treated animals with or without exposure to the FST. An enhanced chloride uptake following GABA stimulation was observed in vehicle-treated rats following the swimming trial. However, similar values of chloride uptake were found among rats withdrawn from DZM at 96 h either exposed or not to the FST and vehicle-treated animals without prior stress exposure. These findings show that BDZ withdrawal alters the neurochemical and behavioral response to a subsequent stressful experience. These lines of evidence may indicate that BZD withdrawal reduced the ability to develop an adaptive response to stress.

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