Hasey_1991_Biol.Psychiatry_29_127

Reference

Title : The cholinergic-adrenergic hypothesis of depression reexamined using clonidine, metoprolol, and physostigmine in an animal model - Hasey_1991_Biol.Psychiatry_29_127
Author(s) : Hasey G , Hanin I
Ref : Biological Psychiatry , 29 :127 , 1991
Abstract :

The role of central nervous system (CNS) cholinergic and noradrenergic mechanisms in the pathogenesis of depression and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis hyperactivity is examined using the Behavioral Despair rat model of depression. Immobility (IM), the analog of depression in this model, and plasma corticosterone (C) were increased by physostigmine (PHYSO). Neostigmine (NEO), which does not cross the blood-brain barrier, produced the same peripheral cholinomimetic effects and motor inhibition as PHYSO, but did not change IM. PHYSO's effects on C and IM were blocked by metoprolol pretreatment and partially blocked by clonidine pretreatment. PHYSO increased acetylcholine in the striatum. In this animal model of depression, cholinergic and noradrenergic mechanisms are interactively involved in the regulation of behavioral depression and the HPA axis.

PubMedSearch : Hasey_1991_Biol.Psychiatry_29_127
PubMedID: 1847308

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Citations formats

Hasey G, Hanin I (1991)
The cholinergic-adrenergic hypothesis of depression reexamined using clonidine, metoprolol, and physostigmine in an animal model
Biological Psychiatry 29 :127

Hasey G, Hanin I (1991)
Biological Psychiatry 29 :127