Abstract

A number of non-pharmacological factors have been shown to influence drug self-administration in experimental animals. This report examines diurnal changes in drug self-administration by rhesus monkeys trained to self-administer food (1gm fruit-flavored pellets) and cocaine (0.01 or 0.032mg/kg/injection) under a second order FR4 (VR16:S) schedule during four daily food and drug self-administration sessions. Saline, different unit doses of cocaine (0.001-0.1mg/kg/injection) or different unit doses of heroin (0.0001-0.01mg/kg/injection) were substituted for the maintenance dose of cocaine during drug sessions. Dose-effect curves relating unit dose of cocaine or heroin to the number of injections per session displayed an inverted U-shape during each of the four daily drug sessions. When 0.032mg/kg/injection cocaine or 0.0032mg/kg/injection heroin were available, monkeys usually self-administered the maximum number of injections during all four drug sessions. Substitution of saline or lower unit doses of cocaine (0.001-0.01mg/kg/injection) or heroin (0.0001-0.001mg/kg/injection) decreased the number of injections/session; however, these decreases were consistently greater during the evening (20.00-21.00h) and morning (07.00-08.00h) sessions than during the afternoon sessions (12.00-13.00h and 16.00-17.00h). As a result, the ascending limbs of the cocaine and heroin dose-effect curves for the evening and morning sessions were shifted to the right of the ascending limbs of the dose-effect curves for the afternoon sessions. Moreover, when saline was substituted for cocaine for only two sessions per day, drug self-administration decreased more during the evening and morning sessions even when the cocaine was available during those sessions. These findings suggest a diurnal variation in cocaine and heroin self-administration. Specifically, drug self-administration during the evening and morning sessions appears to be more sensitive to a decrease in reinforcer magnitude than responding during the afternoon sessions. These findings confirm and extend previous reports of the influence of non-pharmacological factors on drug self-administration.

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