Abstract

The initial treatment phenomenon (ITP) to diazepam was investigated using a conditioned suppression of drinking (CSD) paradigm. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were trained to a stable baseline of punished and unpunished responses in the CSD paradigm. In Experiment 1, a control group (1) received vehicle after the CSD session on each of seven drug test days, while group 2 was treated with 3.0 mg/kg diazepam IP after each of these sessions. On drug test days 8-12, diazepam was administered to both groups before the CSD session. Drug test days were separated by 2-3 days when the animals were untreated but performed in the CSD. Prior exposure to diazepam in group 2 after sessions 1-7 conditioned the animals so that a greater release in punished behavior was seen during sessions 8-12 than in the control group (1). In Experiment 2, one group (3) of rats was administered diazepam vehicle after the CSD session for 4 drug test days and another group (4) was injected with 5.6 mg/kg diazepam after the CSD session on these same days. On the next 4 drug test days both groups received diazepam before they performed in the CSD. An ITP was observed in both the control (3) and the drug-conditioned (4) group, although the ITP was less obvious in the conditioned group. After a 28-day period of CSD exposure without vehicle or drug treatments, 5.6 mg/kg diazepam was administered to both groups before the CSD session for an additional 8 drug test days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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