Abstract
GRIMM, J. W. AND R. E. SEE. Cocaine self-administration in ovariectomized rats is predicted by response to novelty, attenuated by 17- β estradiol, and associated with abnormal vaginal cytology. PHYSIOL BEHAV 61(5) 755–761, 1997.—Parameters of cocaine self-administration behavior and vaginal cytological changes were assessed in ovariectomized rats during and after chronic self-administration. Response to novelty as measured by locomotor activity was found to correlate with cocaine self-administration on both fixed ratio (FR) and progressive ratio (PR) schedules of reinforcement. Chronic 17- β estradiol (E 2) replacement did not affect cocaine self-administration on FR or PR schedules of reinforcement. Acute E 2 administration decreased cocaine self-administration on a PR schedule of reinforcement on the day of and on the two days following hormone treatment. Finally, the proliferation of vaginal epithelia following acute E 2 was potentiated in rats both during cocaine self-administration and 30 days into withdrawal when compared with non-drug-exposed animals. These results identify response to novelty as a behavioral index predictive of cocaine self-administration liability in female rats and additionally provide evidence of psychostimulant-hormonal interactions highly relevant to female behavior and physiology.
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