Two experiments were performed with adult male rats of the Long-Evans strain to determine the specificity of fluprazine hydrochloride in decreasing offensive attack. Both 4 and 8 mg/kg doses (IP) significantly reduced offense by resident males selected for high or medium levels of aggression when tested with intruders 30 min postinjection. No reliable differences in other social or nonsocial behaviors were observed. Drug treatment resulted in an overall reduction in offensive behavior of more than 70% in both groups. Actual biting and wounding of intruders by treated subjects was decreased by as much as 98%. A second experiment assessed the drug's influence on defense in the "shock-elicited aggression" paradigm. While duration of boxing to multiple intermittent shocks was significantly suppressed by drug administration (4 and 8 mg/kg), the same doses had no effect on postshock duration of boxing, or sonic and ultrasonic vocalizations following several high intensity (1.5 mA) shocks. These findings are consistent with other research on this and related phenylpiperazine compounds, indicating that its action is specific in reducing offense with minimal influence on social or defensive behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00431784 | DOI Listing |
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
June 1992
Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coyoacán, D.F.
The present experiment explored the anorectic and adipsic effects of fluprazine hydrochloride, a phenylpiperazine compound. Thirty-eight albino rats were randomly assigned either to a control saline group (six rats) or to groups (eight subjects each) receiving an IP dose of fluprazine in saline (1.25, 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
April 1991
Division of Social Sciences, University of Minnesota-Morris 56267.
The effects of eltoprazine (DU 28853) on exploratory behavior and conspecific social attraction were examined in four experiments. Drug treatments somewhat enhanced three forms of exploratory behavior but decreased social attraction. The results indicate that eltoprazine, in sharp contrast to fluprazine, weakly ameliorates neophobic responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
March 1990
Smell and Taste Center, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104.
Fluprazine hydrochloride (DU 27716) decreases copulatory and offensive attack behaviors of male rats and increases their latency to locate buried food in an open field. Since such behaviors are mediated to some degree by the olfactory system, several investigators have hypothesized that this drug may produce an overall impairment in olfactory sensitivity. To test this hypothesis, the influences of five doses of fluprazine hydrochloride (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
June 2014
Division of Social Sciences, University of Minnesota, Morris, Morris, MN 56267 U.S.A.
Fluprazine hydrochloride treatment disrupted both retrieval and nursing components of maternal behaviour when dam and pups were separated for a 30 min post-infection interval. Subsequent experiments revealed that pup contact during this interval, even when restricted to visual/auditory stimulation, abolished the drug's effect on nursing but not retrieval. Fluprazine appears to strongly and consistently disrupt retrieval while its effects on nursing appear more indirectly mediated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiol Behav
September 1986
The effect of Fluprazine Hydrochloride (DU 27716) on preference for conspecific male, estrous female and food odors was examined in male rats utilizing a two-compartment choice apparatus. Treatment with 8.0 mg/kg Fluprazine enhanced the preference of males for male odors but had no effect on preference for either estrous female or food odors.
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