Abstract
The induction of excessive grooming by intraventricular administration of ACTH 1–24 was studied in rats with lesions in midbrain-limbic structures. Such areas have been reported to be implicated in mediating ACTH-induced effects on avoidance behavior, sexual excitement or stretching and yawning. Electrolytic lesions in the septal complex, the anterior hypothalamic/preoptic area, the mammillary bodies, the amygdala, the posterior thalamus and dorsal or ventral hippocampus did not interfere with ACTH-induced excessive grooming. Lesioning of the hippocampal complex by aspiration led to an inhibition of excessive grooming depending on the degree of hippocampal damage. Amygdala and hippocampal lesions enhanced the display of stretching and yawning activity after treatment with the peptide. The data indicate differences in the neural substrates mediating the effect of ACTH on extinction of conditioned avoidance behavior, excessive grooming, sexual excitement and stretching and yawning.
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