Abstract

The question addressed is whether or not physiological factors associated with body weight are necessary for serotonergic inhibition of feeding reward. Six rats received the serotonergic drug d-fenfluramine (d-FEN 1.5 and 2.5 mg/kg IP) while they electrically self-stimulated a perifornical lateral hypothalamic (PfLH) site that would induce feeding. As a control, self-stimulation was alternated with stimulation-escape. Both were measured at normal body weight, then at 80% body weight, then normal weight again. Three results were significant. 1) d-FEN markedly suppressed self-stimulation at normal body weight. 2) Self-stimulation rate increased when the animals were put on a diet that reduced body weight to 80% of normal. 3) At this low body weight, d-FEN no longer had any effect on self-stimulation. The results suggest that some correlate of normal food intake or body weight is necessary for serotonergic inhibition of the PfLH feeding-reward system. Possible explanations for fenfluramine's loss of effect at low weight are discussed.

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