Title : Chronic ethanol or nicotine treatment results in partial cross-tolerance between these agents - Burch_1988_Psychopharmacology.(Berl)_95_452 |
Author(s) : Burch JB , de Fiebre CM , Marks MJ , Collins AC |
Ref : Psychopharmacology (Berl) , 95 :452 , 1988 |
Abstract :
Female DBA/2Ibg mice were treated chronically (21 days) with ethanol- or dextrin-containing liquid diets or infused chronically with nicotine (8 mg/kg/h) or saline for 10 days. The responses of these animals to challenge doses of ethanol (2.5 g/kg) or nicotine (1 or 2 mg/kg) were measured using a test battery consisting of respiration rate, acoustic startle response, Y-maze crosses and rears, heart rate and body temperature. Chronic ethanol-treated animals were tolerant to the effects elicited by a challenge dose of ethanol on four of the six measures and were cross-tolerant to nicotine's effects on the acoustic startle test. Chronic nicotine-treated animals were tolerant to nicotine's effects on five of the six measures and cross-tolerant to ethanol's effects on heart rate and body temperature. Thus, partial cross-tolerance between ethanol and nicotine exists. Chronic nicotine treatment resulted in significant increases in L-[3H]-nicotine binding in six of seven brain regions and in alpha-[125I]-bungarotoxin binding in three of seven brain regions. Chronic ethanol treatment failed to alter the binding of either ligand. Therefore, the cross-tolerance that develops between ethanol and nicotine is not totally dependent on alterations in the number of brain nicotinic receptors. |
PubMedSearch : Burch_1988_Psychopharmacology.(Berl)_95_452 |
PubMedID: 3145516 |
Burch JB, de Fiebre CM, Marks MJ, Collins AC (1988)
Chronic ethanol or nicotine treatment results in partial cross-tolerance between these agents
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
95 :452
Burch JB, de Fiebre CM, Marks MJ, Collins AC (1988)
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
95 :452