Cocaine administration has been shown to produce immediate positive (rewarding) and subsequent negative (anxiogenic) effects in humans and animals. These dual and opposing affective responses have been more difficult to demonstrate with administration of methamphetamine (meth). While animal studies have reliably demonstrated the positive reinforcing effects of the drug, reports of negative aftereffects following acute exposure have been few in number and contradictory in nature. The current research was devised to assess the effects of acute meth using a runway model of self-administration that is uniquely sensitive to both the positive and negative effects of a drug reinforcer in the same animal on the same trial. Male rats were allowed to traverse a straight alley once a day for 16 consecutive days/trials where entry into the goal box resulted in a single IV injection of meth (0.25, 0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg/inj.). The chosen doses were confirmed to be psychoactive as they produced dose-dependent increases in motoric/locomotor activation in these same subjects. The results demonstrated a U-shaped dose-response curve for the reinforcing effects of meth in that the intermediate dose group (0.5 mg/kg) produced the strongest approach behavior in the runway. Unlike other psychomotor stimulants, like cocaine, animals running for IV meth exhibited no evidence of any significant approach-avoidance behaviors reflective of the drug's negative anxiogenic effects. These results suggest that the abuse potential for meth is likely higher than for other shorter-acting psychomotor stimulants and reaffirms the utility of the runway procedure as a screen for a substance's abuse potential.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbb.2018.09.003 | DOI Listing |
Heliyon
January 2025
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Zagazig University, P.O. Box 44519, Zagazig, Egypt.
This investigation represents porothermoelastic asphalt material with thermal shock due to multi-phase lag model of thermoelasticity. By applying proper boundary conditions to the normal mode approach, we were able to achieve the precise solution. The graphs provide numerical results for the physical quantities supplied in physical domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
November 2024
School of Science, Technology and Engineering, University of Sunshine Coast, Sippy Downs, QLD 4556, Australia.
Runway surface friction is critically important to safe aircraft operations and mostly depends on the surface texture, which provides grip in the presence of contamination and directly affects the friction coefficient in general. Microtexture assessment is the most challenging part of texture assessment since there is no standardised pavement microtexture control method in runway maintenance and management practice. The purpose of this study was to develop a simple laser profilometer and analysis model and subsequent validation for use in runway friction surveys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
November 2024
National Key Laboratory of Transient Physics, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing 210094, China.
As an important civil and military infrastructure, airport runway pavement is faced with threats from cluster munitions, since it is vulnerable to projectile impacts with internal explosions. Aiming at the damage assessment of an island airport runway pavement under impact, this work dealt with discrete modeling of rigid projectile penetration into concrete pavement and the calcareous sand subgrade multi-layer structure. First, the Discrete Element Method (DEM) is introduced to model concrete and calcareous sand granular material features, like cohesive fracture and strain hardening due to compression, with mesoscale constitutive laws governing the normal and shear interactions between adjacent particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Commun
October 2024
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA.
Preclinical models of Parkinson's disease are imperative to gain insight into the neural circuits that contribute to gait dysfunction in advanced stages of the disease. A PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 knockout early-onset model of Parkinson's disease may be a useful rodent model to study the effects of neurotransmitter degeneration caused by a loss of PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 function on brain activity during volitional gait. The goal of this study was to measure changes in neural activity at the cerebellar vermis at 8 months of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Commun
October 2024
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA.
Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by gait dysfunction in the advanced stages of the disease. The unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine toxin-induced model is the most studied animal model of Parkinson's disease, which reproduces gait dysfunction after >68% dopamine loss in the substantia nigra pars compacta. The extent to which the neural activity in hemi-parkinsonian rats correlates to gait dysfunction and dopaminergic cell loss is not clear.
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