Abstract

Ten male rats were trained to discriminate between the stimulus properties of 0.6 mg/kg l-cathione and saline in a two-lever food-motivated operant task. Once trained, rats showed a dose-dependent increase in discrimination over a dosage range of 0.15–1.2 mg/kg l-cathinone. Analysis of this dose-response relationship indicated an ED50 of 0.27 mg/kg. Pretreatment with 0.2 mg/kg of the specific dopamine blocking drug haloperidol increased this ED50 to 0.47 mg/kg and significantly decreased discriminative performance when co-administered with either 0.15, 0.3, or 0.6 mg/kg l-cathinone. Since the dose-effect curves for cathinone with and without haloperidol pre-treatment were parallel, it is suggested that l-cathinone, the active constituent in khat, produces its discriminative properties, in part, by mediation of dopaminergic neuronal systems.

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