Abstract

The authors previously demonstrated that chronic inescapable swim stress and footshock increase the capacity of a fixed dose of a muscarinic agonist to produce hypothermia in the rat. This project was designed to determine whether chronic inescapable swim stress in cold water would render a low dose of a muscarinic agonist, devoid of an effect on motor behavior in the naive rat (i.e., prior to subjection to the course of swim stress), an inhibitor of mobility. The study involved two groups of rats, an experimental group which received arecoline and a control group which received saline five minutes prior to being placed in an open field. Number of crossings, the dependent variable, was measured in both groups before and after a 14-day course of twice daily inescapable swim stress of 10 minutes duration at 12°C. The arecoline-treated group, as hypothesized, exhibited a significantly greater reduction in number of crossings than the saline-treated groups following the course of swim stress.

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