Abstract

Methamphetamine use by women, even throughout pregnancy, is common. But there is limited knowledge about the effects in prenatally methamphetamine-exposed children. This study investigated how prenatal methamphetamine exposure in rats, via maternal i.v. self-administration, affected the sensitivity of adult offspring to methamphetamine in comparison with controls. The offspring were generated from dams either self-administering methamphetamine daily under limited-access conditions prior to and throughout pregnancy, or their respective saline-yoked control dams. Spontaneous and methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity was assessed in male and female offspring of both exposure groups after a range of methamphetamine doses. In a separate group of offspring, acquisition of i.v. methamphetamine self-administration, responding under fixed and progressive ratio schedules of methamphetamine reinforcement, and reinstatement of extinguished drug-seeking behavior were assessed. Methamphetamine dose-dependently increased locomotor activity in both exposure groups. However, methamphetamine-exposed males showed significantly enhanced locomotor activity compared with controls at 1mg/kg, and methamphetamine-exposed females showed significantly enhanced locomotor activity compared with controls at 3.2mg/kg. Methamphetamine-exposed offspring of both sexes acquired methamphetamine self-administration faster and showed overall higher levels of methamphetamine-induced reinstatement compared with controls. Taken together, these results indicate that prenatal methamphetamine exposure to relatively low levels alters methamphetamine sensitivity in male and female adult offspring.

Full Text
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