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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Haloperidol (HP) can block both the motor stimulation and the neurotoxic vacuolization of MK-801, suggesting that the two drugs have antagonistic brain actions. However, we show here that the modest EEG slowing produced by HP and MK-801 individually is massively potentiated when the drugs are combined. This finding challenges the argument for the
PCP
model of
schizophrenia
that assumes a general antagonism of neuroleptics and NMDA channel blockers. It further suggests that blockade of MK-801 motor effects is an inadequate test for antipsychotic drug actions. Our data indicate that intact function of D2 receptors (or other HP targets) is required to prevent generalized EEG slowing in the presence of NMDA channel blockade, a possibility of potential clinical interest.
...
PMID:Haloperidol potentiates the EEG slowing of MK-801 despite blocking its motor effects: implications for the PCP model of schizophrenia. 969 98
Striatopallidal output neurons, which coexpress D2-dopamine receptors and NMDA receptors, are logically a potential site of interaction between corticostriatal glutamatergic input and dopaminergic systems. Recent hypotheses about the etiology of
schizophrenia
have implicated both excitatory amino acid and dopamine systems. The present study was designed to examine, in vivo, the interaction between D2-dopamine receptors and NMDA receptors in the regulation of the expression of the early immediate genes (IEGs), zif 268 and jun B, in striatopallidal neurons. We tested whether coadministration of NMDA antagonists interacted with the actions of the D2 agonist, quinpirole, on IEG expression following dopamine depletion with reserpine. When rats were pretreated with the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonists, MK 801 (1 mg/kg) or
PCP
(20 mg/kg), together with quinpirole, the quinpirole reversal of reserpine induction of zif 268 mRNA was potentiated in all regions examined. MK 801 alone had no significant effect on reserpine induction of zif 268 mRNA. Pretreatment with the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist, CPP (5 mg/kg), did not significantly alter the dose response of zif 268 mRNA expression to quinpirole in any region. There was no significant effect of MK 801 on jun B mRNA expression, either on the response to quinpirole or when administered alone with reserpine. Our findings provide evidence of an interaction between the NMDA receptor channel system and the D2-dopamine system on a molecular level in striatopallidal neurons carrying output from the basal ganglia.
...
PMID:Potentiation of D2-dopamine receptor-mediated suppression of zif 268 by non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonists in reserpinized rats. 972 66
Schizophrenic and schizotypal patients exhibit deficits in the habituation and prepulse inhibition (PPI) of startle responses, providing operational measures of the sensorimotor gating or filtering deficits suggested to contribute to cognitive disorganization in these patients. In rats, hallucinogens, entactogens, and NMDA antagonists share the ability to both retard startle habituation and disrupt PPI. Extensive pharmacological studies in rats have indicated that the effects of hallucinogens on habituation are mediated by direct agonist actions at 5-HT2 receptors. The effects of the entactogens on both habituation and PPI reflect indirect agonist actions due to the stimulation of presynaptic serotonin release. These observations in rats have supported the development of 5-HT2A antagonists for the treatment of
schizophrenia
. Animal studies have shown that PPI is modulated by multiple interacting neurotransmitters, including dopaminergic, serotonergic, cholinergic, GABAergic, and glutamatergic systems within cortical, limbic, striatal, and brainstem structures. The effects of
PCP
and other NMDA antagonists on PPI are insensitive to either dopaminergic or serotonergic antagonists, but are reduced by atypical antipsychotics such as clozapine, olanzapine, and Seroquel. Thus, the
PCP
model of
schizophrenia
-like deficits in sensorimotor gating offers promise for the identification and neurobiological investigation of atypical antipsychotics. The cross-species study of homologous gating functions, such as habituation and PPI, in animal models and psychiatric patients provides novel opportunities for the exploration of neurobiological substrates relevant to the group of schizophrenias.
...
PMID:Behavioral studies of hallucinogenic drugs in animals: implications for schizophrenia research. 975 37
Phencyclidine (
PCP
) induces stereotyped behaviour and social isolation in rats; comparisons with clinical observations have suggested that these behaviours may mimic certain aspects of the positive and the negative symptoms, respectively, of an acute schizophrenic episode. Novel antipsychotics are effective in treating the positive symptoms in schizophrenic patients and have also shown some promise in treating the negative symptoms. In the present study the effects of the novel antipsychotics remoxipride (2.5-20 mg/kg), risperidone (0.02-0.63 mg/kg), sertindole (0.01-2.5 mg/kg), olanzapine (0.16-2.5 mg/kg) and quetiapine (0.16-10 mg/kg) on
PCP
-induced behaviours were determined. The drugs were administered daily for 3 or 21 days in combination with vehicle or 2.0 mg/kg of
PCP
for the last 3 days of the administration regime, and the rats were tested using the social interaction test. The antipsychotic drugs all reliably reduced the level of
PCP
-induced stereotyped behaviour and had distinct effects on
PCP
-induced social isolation. Comparison with clinical findings suggests that the
PCP
-induced behaviours respond to treatment with antipsychotic drugs in a manner that correlates well with clinical observations, and that this animal model of
schizophrenia
may be useful for evaluating novel drug candidates. However, the study also showed that additional experiments are required to determine the specificity by which antipsychotic drugs alleviate
PCP
-induced behaviours because most of the drugs also affected considerably the behaviour of the control animals.
...
PMID:Effect of novel antipsychotic drugs on phencyclidine-induced stereotyped behaviour and social isolation in the rat social interaction test. 983 15
Phencyclidine (
PCP
) can induce a model psychosis in humans that mimics the positive and negative symptoms of
schizophrenia
. In the social interaction test
PCP
induces stereotyped behaviour and social isolation in rats, and these behaviours can be inhibited by antipsychotic drugs. In order to further evaluate the predictive validity of this model of
schizophrenia
the anxiolytic diazepam (0.02-17.5 micromol/kg; 0.005-5.0 mg/kg), the antidepressant citalopram (0.62-19.8 micromol/kg; 0.3-4.0 mg/kg), the opioid agonist methadone (0.36-5.8 micromol/kg; 0.13-2.0 mg/kg) and the opioid antagonist naloxone (0.34-22.0 micromol/kg; 0.13-8.0 mg/kg) were tested as examples of drugs without antipsychotic activity. The experiments demonstrated that these compounds did not specifically inhibit the behavioural effects of
PCP
. So far only antipsychotic drugs have been able to specifically inhibit the
PCP
-induced behaviours.
...
PMID:Effects of diazepam, citalopram, methadone and naloxone on PCP-induced stereotyped behaviour and social isolation in the rat social interaction test. 988 22
Phencyclidine (
PCP
) is a drug of abuse that produces
schizophrenia
-like symptoms in humans and increases locomotor activity and stereotypic behavior in rodents.
PCP
-induced alteration in rat locomotor activity is thought to be mediated by an inhibition of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in the striatum and other brain regions. In this study, rats treated chronically with
PCP
(20 mg/kg once per day for 5 days) showed a marked increase in locomotor activity following a
PCP
challenge (3.2 mg/kg) administered after either 3 or 8 days of withdrawal. In biochemical assays, the release of striatal [14C]GABA by NMDA was enhanced by about 77% by chronic
PCP
treatment, whereas [3H]ACh release was increased by about 31% in tissue from
PCP
-treated rats. Even though binding experiments with 1-[1-(2-thiethyl)cyclohexyl]piperidyl-3,4 3H(N) ([3H]TCP) showed no alteration in the Kd or Bmax in whole striatum, quantitative immunocytochemical experiments found an upregulation in the NR1 subunit in the cell bodies and neuropil of cortical and striatal regions of the forebrain following chronic
PCP
treatment. An increase in the size of NR1-immunoreactive cells in the forebrain was also observed following chronic
PCP
treatment. Together, these data may help in understanding the mechanisms underlying the adaptive response to chronic reduction in glutamatergic NMDA transmission that has been postulated to be involved in the etiology of
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Augmentation of locomotor activity by chronic phencyclidine is associated with an increase in striatal NMDA receptor function and an upregulation of the NR1 receptor subunit. 1002 41
Administration of noncompetitive NMDA/glutamate receptor antagonists, such as phencyclidine (
PCP
) and ketamine, to humans induces a broad range of schizophrenic-like symptomatology, findings that have contributed to a hypoglutamatergic hypothesis of
schizophrenia
. Moreover, a history of experimental investigations of the effects of these drugs in animals suggests that NMDA receptor antagonists may model some behavioral symptoms of
schizophrenia
in nonhuman subjects. In this review, the usefulness of
PCP
administration as a potential animal model of
schizophrenia
is considered. To support the contention that NMDA receptor antagonist administration represents a viable model of
schizophrenia
, the behavioral and neurobiological effects of these drugs are discussed, especially with regard to differing profiles following single-dose and long-term exposure. The neurochemical effects of NMDA receptor antagonist administration are argued to support a neurobiological hypothesis of
schizophrenia
, which includes pathophysiology within several neurotransmitter systems, manifested in behavioral pathology. Future directions for the application of NMDA receptor antagonist models of
schizophrenia
to preclinical and pathophysiological research are offered.
...
PMID:The neuropsychopharmacology of phencyclidine: from NMDA receptor hypofunction to the dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia. 1006 82
Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 15 schizophrenic patients and 17 normal controls in an auditory oddball paradigm in order to investigate the effects of stimulus probability and interstimulus interval (ISI) on deficits in mismatch negativity (MMN) generation in
schizophrenia
. MMN amplitude was reduced for schizophrenics overall, with the degree of deficit increasing as deviant probability decreased. In contrast, schizophrenic subjects were no more affected by alterations in ISI than controls. The experimental design also permitted evaluation of N1 generation as a function of ISI in
schizophrenia
. Schizophrenic subjects showed decreased N1 amplitude across conditions, with the degree of deficit increasing with increasing ISI. For both MMN and N1, therefore, the degree of deficit increased with increasing component amplitude in normals, implying that the deficit in ERP generation in
schizophrenia
may reflect a decrease in maximal current flow through underlying neuronal ensembles. The observed pattern of dysfunction is consistent both with observations of impaired precision of processing in
schizophrenia
, and with predictions of the
PCP
/NMDA model.
...
PMID:Diminished responsiveness of ERPs in schizophrenic subjects to changes in auditory stimulation parameters: implications for theories of cortical dysfunction. 1022 9
Phencyclidine (
PCP
) is a hallucinogenic drug that can mimic several aspects of the schizophrenic symptomatology in healthy volunteers. In a series of studies
PCP
was administered to rats to determine whether it was possible to develop an animal model of the positive and negative symptoms of
schizophrenia
. The rats were tested in the social interaction test and it was found that
PCP
dose-dependently induces stereotyped behaviour and social withdrawal, which may correspond to certain aspects of the positive and negative symptoms, respectively. The effects of
PCP
could be reduced selectively by antipsychotic drug treatment, whereas drugs lacking antipsychotic effects did not alleviate the
PCP
-induced behaviours. Together these findings indicate that
PCP
effects in the rat social interaction test may be a model of the positive and negative symptoms of
schizophrenia
with face and predictive validity and that it may be useful for the evaluation of novel antipsychotic compounds.
...
PMID:Phencyclidine in the social interaction test: an animal model of schizophrenia with face and predictive validity. 1035 92
Phencyclidine (
PCP
), a non-competitive NMDA antagonist with actions at multiple other central nervous system receptors, can cause both acute and lasting psychoses in humans, and has also been used in cross-species models of psychosis. Acute exposure to
PCP
in rats produces behavioral changes, including a loss of prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the startle reflex, which parallels the loss of PPI observed in
schizophrenia
patients. Sustained exposure to
PCP
in rats produces neuropathological changes in several limbic regions and prolonged behavioral abnormalities that may parallel neuropsychological deficits in
schizophrenia
. It is unclear whether sustained
PCP
exposure will also produce a loss of prepulse inhibition which parallels the decrease observed in
schizophrenia
patients. In the present study, we examined changes in PPI during and after sustained
PCP
administration, using 5-day
PCP
exposure via subcutaneous osmotic minipumps, or 14-day
PCP
exposure via repeated intraperitoneal injections. In both forms of drug delivery, PPI was disrupted during, but not after, sustained drug exposure. PPI does not appear to be sensitive to neuropathological effects of sustained
PCP
exposure.
...
PMID:Effects of sustained phencyclidine exposure on sensorimotor gating of startle in rats. 1037 17
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