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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects and interactions of phencyclidine (PCP), methylphenidate and d-amphetamine on locomotor activity, stereotyped behavior and
ataxia
in reserpine- and vehicle-pretreated rats were examined. The behaviors of rats receiving PCP alone or in combination with other drugs were quantified along three dimensions (locomotor activity, stereotyped behavior, and
ataxia
) on scales developed in this laboratory. The behaviors of groups receiving methylphenidate and/or d-amphetamine in treatment combinations other than those including PCP were quantified using a well known d-amphetamine behavioral rating scale. PCP, methylphenidate and d-amphetamine each induced significant increases in locomotor activity and stereotyped behavior when administered alone.
Reserpine
was found to antagonize PCP-induced locomotor activity and stereotyped behavior, and methylphenidate-induced stereotyped behavior at a dose which either potentiated or had no significant effect upon d-amphetamine-induced behavior (depending upon the scale used).
Reserpine
also potentiated PCP-induced
ataxia
. Whereas PCP potentiated the locomotor activity induced by d-amphetamine in both reserpine- and vehicle-pretreated subjects, methylphenidate marginally antagonized d-amphetamine-induced stereotypy in reserpine-pretreated subjects. PCP-induced
ataxia
in reserpine pretreated subjects appeared moderately reduced in subjects also receiving d-amphetamine. In general, the behavioral effects of PCP appear to be more similar to those of methylphenidate than to those of d-amphetamine, but differences are also found between PCP and methylphenidate. The results are discussed in relation to a behavioral model recently proposed as a method for differentiating indirect dopamine agonists on the basis of their neurochemical mechanisms of action.
...
PMID:Effects of phencyclidine and methylphenidate on d-amphetamine-induced behaviors in reserpine pretreated rats. 719 76