Abstract

Rats were given pentobarbital by daily intubation. Sleeping times and blood levels of drug at awakening, after intraperitoneal test doses of ethanol, pentobarbital, or barbital, were measured at various times during chronic treatment in order to assess the degree of tolerance developed. No central nervous system (CNS) tolerance to pentobarbital or cross-tolerance to barbital or ethanol occurred on treatment with sodium pentobarbital, 50 mg/kg, daily. However, when the size and frequency of pentobarbital treatment doses were increased (50-80 mg/kg, three times daily) a clear CNS tolerance to barbital occurred. Chronic administration of p-chlorophenylalanine (p-CPA), in a dose previously shown to maintain more than 95% depletion of brain serotonin (5-HT), enhanced the acute hypnotic effect of barbiturates and ethanol. Independently of this effect, p-CPA treatment also resulted in a reduction in the development of CNS tolerance. These results are consistent with earlier findings that brain 5-HT depletion retards tolerance development to central depressant drugs as measured by a variety of unrelated tests.

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