Capsaicin affects aggressive behavior, but not hot plate responding, of adult male mice.

Physiol Behav

Section of Behavioral Pathophysiology, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy.

Published: April 1991

Adult male mice of albino Swiss-derived CD-1 strain were used to assess the effects of capsaicin (a powerful agent that produces a marked depletion of the undecapeptide substance P) on both intraspecific aggressive behavior (induced by 8 weeks of individual housing) and pain sensitivity. Capsaicin was given SC, 48 h before behavioral testing. Aggressive behavior, scored during a 5-min session under red light, was significantly enhanced by capsaicin treatment (50 or 100 microliters of a 7.5 mg/ml solution). In fact, Total Aggressive Episodes, Attacks, and Upright Offensive Posture were significantly higher in the two capsaicin-treated groups, while Latency to the first Attack was decreased, when compared to both vehicle or unhandled controls. A concomitant decrease in Submissive Postures and Flee was also evident in capsaicin mice. Hot plate testing (55 +/- 0.1 degrees C, cutoff time 30 s), carried out on nonisolated mice, did not reveal any difference among the two capsaicin groups (same doses) and vehicle or unhandled controls.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0031-9384(91)90308-bDOI Listing

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