Abstract

Recently, use of the synthetic cathinone (aka "bath salt") eutylone has risen in the United States and globally. Due to its novelty in drug markets, its affective properties remain largely uninvestigated. In this context, drugs of abuse have both rewarding and aversive effects and understanding these effects, their relative balance, and factors that impact each are important to understanding the likelihood of drug use and abuse. This investigation attempted to characterize eutylone's rewarding and aversive effects in a combined conditioned taste avoidance/place preference assay. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were given 20-min access to saccharin, injected with one of five doses of eutylone (0, 3, 10, 18, 32 mg/kg; intraperitoneally; IP), and placed on one side of a place conditioning apparatus. On the following day, subjects were given 20-min access to water, injected IP with vehicle, and placed on the other side of the apparatus. After five conditioning cycles, place preference and saccharin avoidance were assessed. Eutylone induced significant taste avoidance but did not significantly increase time spent on the drug-paired side (relative to controls). Excluding animals with high initial side preference, however, eutylone induced a preference at all doses with the high dose group displaying higher preference than controls. There was no significant correlation between eutylone's aversive and rewarding effects. These data indicate that eutylone (like other synthetic cathinones) induces both rewarding and aversive effects and highlight the need to assess the impact of various factors on its affective properties (and their balance) and on their use and abuse. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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