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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Stereotyped behaviour can be produced in animals both by stimulant drugs (amphetamine, methamphetamine, cocaine, etc.) and by a restricted cage environment. Strong evidence indicates that the effect of stimulant drugs is mediated through a primary effect on brain dopamine, and further knowledge is now being acquired through studies on dopamine receptors, tolerance and reverse tolerance to amphetamines and the neural connections of dopaminergic sub-systems with other sub-systems in the brain. The forms of stereotypy induced by a restricted cage environment have been compared with other effects of this type of environment on behaviour and general health. This has led to a hypothesis that stereotyped behaviour may function as a survival (or defence) strategy in an unfavourable milieu. Some evidence indicates that brain dopamine is also involved in the mediation of stereotyped behaviour induced by the environment. The relevance of these results in clinical psychiatry is discussed. Stereotypy (and related disintegrated behaviour) is a well known feature of several mental diseases.
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PMID:Stereotyped behaviour in animals induced by stimulant drugs or by a restricted cage environment: relation to disintegrated behaviour, brain dopamine and psychiatric disease. 306 93

Autoaggression and stereotypies in individually housed cynomolgus monkeys were compared in a standard primate cage and an enriched playpen environment. Stereotypy and autoaggression were markedly reduced in the playpen, but reappeared on return to the home cage. Some of the various activities available in the playpen but not others engaged the animals' attention.
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PMID:Effects of different environmental enrichment devices on cage stereotypies and autoaggression in captive cynomolgus monkeys. 323 May 81

In order to determine the relationship between striatal dopamine (DA) receptor density and psychomotor performance in senescent animals, two experiments were carried out. In the first, the age-related motor deficits were characterized using a battery of four psychomotor tests (rod walking, wire hanging, inclined screen, plank walking). These tests were administered to three groups of male Fischer rats (mature, 6-8 months; middle aged, 12-18 months; and senescent, 25 months) and performance measured. Age-related differences were observed on all the tasks, with the oldest animals showing the poorest performance. These animals were then used in a second experiment in which one-half of the group of animals from each age was administered 1.86 mg/kg/day of haloperidol for 14 days (via surgically implanted Alza Minipumps. Control groups of animals from each age were given pumps which contained only the vehicle (HCl diluted with distilled water, pH = 2.9). Following the 14 day drug administration, the pumps were surgically removed and 3 days later all the groups were retested on the psychomotor tests. Stereotypy (to 0.5 mg/kg of apomorphine, sniffing, licking, grooming and cage crossings) was also re-examined. Results show that haloperidol-treated animals from all three age groups display greater response times (i.e., better performance) than vehicle-treated animals on the battery of four motor tests and, the haloperidol-treated old animals exhibit more sniffing and grooming than the vehicle-treated old animals. Parallel increases in [3H]spiperone binding seen in all haloperidol-treated groups suggest a relationship between increases in the density of striatal DA receptors and improvement in motor performance.
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PMID:Psychomotor performance in the senescent rodent: reduction of deficits via striatal dopamine receptor up-regulation. 668 1

Stereotyped movements are described in monkeys and humans and are classified as arising from constraint, sensory deprivation in infancy, amphetamine treatment or psychotic states. It is argued that, with the exception of cage stereotypies, stereotyped behaviour is evidence of abnormality in the nervous system consequent upon distorted maturational processes, organic defect or biochemical disturbance. Stereotypy is associated with a state of cognitive inflexibility and social and sensory isolation in humans and monkeys. It is suggested that, while no simple biochemical disturbance in the brain can describe these various occurrences of stereotypy, the cross-species occurrence of a syndrome of isolation, cognitive inflexibility and stereotypy implies a related mechanism mediating these divergent effects. If stereotypy is regarded as a consequence of failure to use sensory input to direct behaviour, therapeutic regimes designed to stimulate responsive behaviours and social interactions are more likely to be effective in the long run than direct attempts to suppress stereotypy.
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PMID:Stereotypy in monkeys and humans. 680 1

Little information is available on the response of vervet monkeys to different housing conditions or on the suitability of enrichment devices or methods for vervet monkeys. In this study, the authors evaluated the occurrence of stereotyped behavior in adult vervet monkeys under various conditions of housing and enrichment. The variables included cage size, cage level (upper or lower), enrichment with a foraging log, enrichment with an exercise cage and presence of a mate. The authors first determined the incidence of stereotyped behavior in captive-bred, singly housed adult female and male vervet monkeys. They then exposed monkeys to different housing and enrichment situations and compared the incidence of stereotyped behavior among the monkeys. The authors found that more females than males engaged in stereotyped behavior and that females, on average, engaged in such behavior for longer periods of time than males. Stereotyped behavior was most often associated with a small, single cage. The average amount of observed stereotyped activity in monkeys housed in a small cage was significantly lower when the monkeys had access to either a foraging log or an exercise cage. Stereotyped behavior was also lower in female monkeys that were housed (either with a male or without a male) in a larger cage. The least amount of abnormal behavior was associated with the largest, most complex and enriched housing situation. Males and females housed in cages on the lower level of two-level housing engaged in more stereotyped behavior than did monkeys housed in the upper level, regardless of the presence or type of enrichment provided.
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PMID:The effect of housing and environmental enrichment on stereotyped behavior of adult vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops). 2169 Dec 96