P.6.d.016 Impulsive choice predicts resistance to extinction and vulnerability to reinstatement of cocaine seeking

European Neuropsychopharmacology(2010)

Cited 0|Views11
No score
Abstract
Cocaine not only induces intense rewarding sensations but also craving for more cocaine, particularly during abstinence, an effect that contributes, together with other factors, to relapse. Here we sought to prevent this effect by extinguishing the conditioned interoceptive cues of cocaine that are thought to be acquired during repeated cocaine use.Cocaine-induced craving was studied in rats using the well-validated model of drug-primed reinstatement of cocaine seeking. To extinguish the conditioned interoceptive effects of cocaine, rats received daily repeated cocaine priming in the absence of drug reinforcement.Cocaine-primed reinstatement of cocaine seeking dramatically decreased with repeated cocaine priming regardless of the testing dose and even following a history of extended access to cocaine self-administration. The extinction of cocaine-primed reinstatement of cocaine seeking was enduring, generalized to stress—another major trigger of drug craving and relapse—and was context-dependent.These findings clearly show that it is feasible to prevent the ability of cocaine and stress to induce cocaine seeking using an approach designed to extinguish the drug's conditioned interoceptive cues. Although this preclinical extinction approach has limitations that need to be overcome in future research (i.e., its context-dependency), it may nevertheless represent a promising basis for the development of a novel exposure therapy against cocaine relapse.
More
Translated text
Key words
impulsive choice,cocaine,extinction
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined