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  • Title: Do GABAB receptors have a role in causing behavioural hyperexcitability, both during ethanol withdrawal and in naive mice?
    Author: Mead AJ, Little HJ.
    Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl); 1995 Jan; 117(2):232-9. PubMed ID: 7753972.
    Abstract:
    The effects of the GABAB agonist baclofen and the GABAB antagonist CGP35348 were examined on the behavioural hyperexcitability which is seen on cessation of chronic ethanol treatment. When baclofen was given to mice of the TO strain after withdrawal from ethanol inhalation, there was evidence of increased hyperexcitability with one dose, 2.5 mg/kg, but no significant change was seen with other doses, 1.25 and 10 mg/kg. When given after withdrawal from a liquid diet containing ethanol, baclofen, 10 mg/kg, produced a large, but short lasting, increase in the ratings of hyperexcitability during the withdrawal period. This effect was significantly decreased when the antagonist CGP35348, 300 mg/kg, was given with baclofen 10 mg/kg. When the antagonist was given alone at 300 mg/kg it significantly decreased the hyperexcitability during ethanol withdrawal. Increases in the ratings of hyperexcitability were seen when baclofen was given to control mice, which had not received ethanol, and these effects were significant, so the effects during ethanol withdrawal were not confined to that syndrome. CGP35348 decreased the behavioural ratings in control animals, and blocked the effects of baclofen 10 mg/kg. When the effects of the compounds on spontaneous locomotor activity in control mice were measured, this parameter was decreased both by baclofen and by CGP35348, at does which were effective in altering the handling-induced behaviour.
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