Abstract

1. Previously the authors have shown that acute citalopram treatment increased the dopamine D2 receptor expression in rat brain striatum (Kameda, 2000). In the present study, the authors attempted to determine whether these effects of citalopram influence the methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity. 2. The pretreatment with a single administration of citalopram (10mg/kg, i.p.) resulted in the significant enhancement of the locomotor activity induced by methamphetamine treatment (1mg/kg, i.p.). The enhancement was observed 30 min, 12 hours, 24 hours, but not 7 days after withdrawal of citalopram administration. 3. Then the authors determined the methamphetamine concentration in rat brain striatum by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The results showed that the concentration of methamphetamine was significantly higher in the rats 24 hours, and also 7 days after withdrawal of citalopram administration, compared to the control rats. 4. These results emphasized the involvement of the high methamphetamine concentration, caused by the pretreatment with citalopram, in the enhancement of the methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity. However high methamphetamine concentration alone could not account for this enhancement, since the high concentration of methamphetamine observed 7 days after withdrawal of citalopram administration did not appear to enhance the methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity. Another mechanism through which the pretreatment with citalopram enhanced the methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity, such as the increased expression of the dopamine D2 receptors, could not be excluded.

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