Chronic N-acetylcysteine during abstinence or extinction after cocaine self-administration produces enduring reductions in drug seeking

The cysteine prodrug N-acetylcysteine (NAC) has been shown to reduce reinstatement of cocaine seeking by normalization of glutamatergic tone. However, enduring inhibition of cocaine seeking produced by NAC has not been explored under different withdrawal conditions. Thus, the present study determine...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2011-05, Vol.337 (2), p.487-493
Hauptverfasser: Reichel, Carmela M, Moussawi, Khaled, Do, Phong H, Kalivas, Peter W, See, Ronald E
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container_end_page 493
container_issue 2
container_start_page 487
container_title The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
container_volume 337
creator Reichel, Carmela M
Moussawi, Khaled
Do, Phong H
Kalivas, Peter W
See, Ronald E
description The cysteine prodrug N-acetylcysteine (NAC) has been shown to reduce reinstatement of cocaine seeking by normalization of glutamatergic tone. However, enduring inhibition of cocaine seeking produced by NAC has not been explored under different withdrawal conditions. Thus, the present study determined whether chronic NAC administered during daily extinction training or daily abstinence after withdrawal from cocaine self-administration would reduce cocaine seeking. Rats self-administered intravenous cocaine during daily 2-h sessions for 12 days, followed by daily extinction or abstinence sessions. During this period, rats received daily injections of saline or NAC (60 or 100 mg/kg). Subsequently, rats were tested for cocaine seeking via conditioned cue, cue + cocaine-primed, and context-induced relapse. Chronic NAC administration blunted cocaine seeking under multiple experimental protocols. Specifically, NAC attenuated responding during cue and cue + cocaine-primed reinstatement tests after extinction and context, cue, and cue + cocaine relapse tests after abstinence. Protection from relapse by NAC persisted well after treatment was discontinued, particularly when the high dose was combined with extinction trials. The finding that NAC reduced cocaine seeking after drug treatment was discontinued has important implications for the development of effective antirelapse medications. These results support recent preclinical and clinical findings that NAC may serve as an effective treatment for inhibiting relapse in cocaine addicts.
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subjects Acetylcysteine - administration & dosage
Acetylcysteine - pharmacology
Animals
Behavioral Pharmacology
Cocaine - administration & dosage
Cocaine - pharmacology
Cocaine-Related Disorders - psychology
Cues
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Drug-Seeking Behavior - drug effects
Extinction, Psychological - drug effects
Glutamic Acid - metabolism
Homeostasis - drug effects
Male
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Recurrence
Self Administration
Substance Withdrawal Syndrome - psychology
title Chronic N-acetylcysteine during abstinence or extinction after cocaine self-administration produces enduring reductions in drug seeking
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