Abstract

It has been suggested that drug abuse belongs to a larger class of addictive behaviors, including smoking, eating or gambling, which are mediated by common processes. Since laboratory animals can be induced to develop drug self-administration as well as indulge in compulsive eating or drinking, the present experiments were designed to find out if the same animals were susceptible to both behaviors. Only certain rats develop amphetamine intravenous self-administration (SA), and this susceptibility can be predicted from their enhanced locomotor response in a novel environment. Furthermore, excessive, non-regulatory drinking, referred to as schedule-induced polydipsia (SIP), in response to the periodic delivery of small amounts of food is only observed in certain rats. Since the propensity to SA has been shown to be influenced by experimental factors and testing for SIP was found to modify behavioral and biological parameters related to the propensity for drug-seeking, we also investigated whether experience of SIP influenced the subsequent development of SA. In Expt. 1, the rats that developed SA also acquired SIP, and had a higher locomotor response to novelty. The results of Expt. 2 showed that testing for SIP influenced the predisposition to develop amphetamine SA. When animals were tested for SIP first, the polydipsic rats subsequently failed to acquire SA, and had a reduced locomotor response to novelty. These changes seemed to be specific to the experience of SIP, as individual differences in the locomotor response to novelty were unchanged when animals were housed in standard laboratory conditions over a period of one month between the two tests. First and foremost, the results indicate that the predisposition to develop amphetamine SA is related to other behaviors with compulsive features, such as SIP. Secondly, these results demonstrate the powerful influence of a specific experience that is thought to have a coping function, in reducing or altering vulnerability to addiction.

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