The effects of passive and active administration of heroin, and associated conditioned stimuli, on consolidation of object memory.

Sci Rep

Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Specialization, University of Guelph, 50 Stone Road East, Guelph, ON, N1G 1Y4, Canada.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The mode of administration of drugs, whether active (self-administration) or passive (yoked), can influence how these substances affect memory consolidation in rats.
  • Study 1 and Study 2 investigated the effects of heroin on memory after training, using different methods of administration, and assessed changes in memory through specific tasks and conditioned responses.
  • Results indicated that while heroin injections enhanced memory in certain groups, exposure to drug-related cues influenced memory similarly across all administration methods, highlighting the significance of drug administration mode on cognitive outcomes, but not on the effects of related environmental stimuli.

Article Abstract

Mode of administration (i.e., active vs passive) could influence the modulatory action that drugs of abuse exert on memory consolidation. Similarly, drug conditioned stimuli modulate memory consolidation and, therefore, acquisition and extinction of this conditioned response could also be influenced by mode of drug administration. Exploring these questions in male Sprague-Dawley rats, Study 1 assessed memory modulation by post-training 0, 0.3 and 1 mg/kg heroin injected subcutaneously in operant chambers (i.e., drug conditioned context). Study 2 asked a similar question but in rats trained to self-administer 0.05 mg/kg/infusion heroin intravenously, as well as in rats that received identical amounts of intravenous heroin but passively, using a yoked design. The period of heroin exposure was followed by repeated drug-free confinement in the conditioned context, and by sessions during which responses on the active lever had no scheduled consequences. Study 2 also included a cue-induced reinstatement session during which lever responses reactivated a light cue previously paired with intravenous heroin infusions. The post-training effects of injected/self-administered/yoked heroin, extinction and reinstatement sessions on memory consolidation were tested using the object location memory task. It was found that post-sample heroin enhanced memory in injected and yoked, but not self-administering, rats. However, post-sample exposure to the heroin cues (i.e., context or/and light cue) modulated memory equally in all groups. Taken together, these data support the conclusion that mode of administration impacts the cognitive consequences of exposure to drugs but not of environmental stimuli linked to their reinforcing effects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9701675PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-24585-9DOI Listing

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