Abstract

Recent reports have shown that treatment with dopamine reuptake inhibitors can selectively decrease responding maintained by low doses of cocaine in rhesus monkeys. This may occur because response-independent delivery of a reuptake inhibitor and response-dependent cocaine have common effects. One behavioral effect that dopamine reuptake inhibitors and cocaine share is their ability to serve as a discriminative stimulus. To compare discriminative effects of several dopaminergic agents with their ability to attenuate cocaine-maintained responding, three rhesus monkeys were first trained to discriminate intravenous injections of cocaine (0.1 mg/kg) from saline. Following generalization testing with various doses of cocaine (0.001–1.0 mg/kg), the relative potencies of phentermine (0.03–1.0 mg/kg), d-amphetamine (0.01–1.0 mg/kg), GBR 12909 (0.01–1.0 mg/kg), and buspirone (0.03–0.56 mg/kg) to substitute for cocaine were assessed. Each drug except buspirone resulted in predominantly cocaine-appropriate responding at doses that were generally without rate-decreasing effect. The ED 50 for the ability of these drugs to substitute for cocaine exhibited the same rank order as that for their effectiveness in decreasing cocaine-maintained responding. Thus, the current results show that the potencies of dopaminergic drugs to decrease cocaine-maintained responding and substitute for cocaine in a drug discrimination paradigm are related.

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