Abstract

The present series of experiments was conducted to investigate the vacuous jaw movements induced by sub-chronic administration of haloperidol (HP). In the first experiment, daily injection of 0.4 mg/kg HP for 10 days increased vacuous jaw movements and decreased rearing behavior. The second and third experiments investigated the interaction between the effects of HP and the anticholinergic drug scopolamine. Co-administration of 0.5 mg/kg scopolamine with 0.4 mg/kg HP for 9 days reduced vacuous jaw movements and increased rearing responses relative to rats that received HP alone. Co-administration of HP with 0.25 mg/kg scopolamine for 9 days increased rearing relative to rats that received HP alone, but there was no effect of the lower dose of scopolamine on vacuous jaw movements. Administration of 0.5 mg/kg scopolamine plus 0.4 mg/kg HP on days 11-14 to rats that had received HP alone for 10 days reversed the effect of HP on rearing, but not on vacuous jaw movements. Rats that had received HP plus scopolamine for 10 days showed dramatic increases in vacuous jaw movements when scopolamine was withdrawn. Because vacuous jaw movements are produced within the first few days of administration, reduced by administration of scopolamine, and exacerbated by withdrawal of scopolamine, the pharmacological characteristics of these movements do not appear to bear a close relation to those of tardive dyskinesia in humans. The present results are consistent with the hypothesis that vacuous jaw movements in rats share some characteristics with Parkinsonian symptoms.

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