Abstract

This study was undertaken to examine (1) whether pre- and/or postoperative training, using water reinforcement, to turn in circles (rotation) affects the behavioral symptoms induced by unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-induced DA denervation of the rat substantia nigra (SN); (2) whether there was any influence of this training on the temporal pattern of recovery; and (3) whether the rotational training influences turning induced by systemic injection of dopaminergic drugs. In the first experiment, rats were trained either ipsi- or contraversive (TI or TO) to the side to be damaged 11 days before and 23 days after lesion, and tested in an open field for rotational behavior following systemic administration of apomorphine and amphetamine. In the second experiment rats were trained only before the lesion was made and tested in the open field for spontaneous circling and thigmotactic behavior. The results of the first experiment indicated maintenance of the training performance after the lesion. At the 14th day after the lesion, the ipsiversive trained group showed a higher contraversive circling frequency after apomorphine injection in relation to the contralateral trained group. In the second experiment, rats trained only before the surgery, showed asymmetrical spontaneous circling in the trained direction before and 14 days after surgery, indicating, in a drug free condition, that training direction can be restored after unilateral SN lesions, even to the contralateral body side. Moreover, thigmotactic behavior indicated a lack of habituation in an open field in unilateral lesion rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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