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1.
Science ; 241(4862): 147, 1988 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3388024
4.
Act Nerv Super (Praha) ; 30(1): 22-39, 1988 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2898193

ABSTRACT

Experiments on naturally occurring hyperkinetic and violent dogs and cats demonstrated the usefulness of low dosages of amphetamine (0,2-1,0 mg/kg per os) in inhibiting these nonadaptive forms of behavior, permitting the development of discriminated Pavlovian and operant conditional responses. When amphetamine therapy was combined systematically with conditioning experiments and psychosocial therapy, for long enough periods of time (many weeks), the beneficial effects of this drug persisted in the nodrug state, i.e. the learning was not state-dependent. Amphetamine also ameliorated significantly conditional emotional visceral responses in dogs with low adaptation to psychologically stressful situations. The same low dosage of amphetamine which improved the behavior and learning of hyperkinetic and violent dogs disrupted the behavior and produced disorientation in normal dogs with previously stable conditional responses.


Subject(s)
Behavior Therapy , Hyperkinesis/drug therapy , Psychotropic Drugs/therapeutic use , Violence , Amphetamine/therapeutic use , Animals , Anti-Anxiety Agents/therapeutic use , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Conditioning, Psychological/drug effects , Emotions/physiology , Hyperkinesis/psychology , Isomerism , Methylphenidate/therapeutic use
6.
Act Nerv Super (Praha) ; 28(2): 117-22, 1986 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3739564

ABSTRACT

Activ. nerv. sup. (Praha) 28, 2, 1986. Utilizing a combination of idiographic and nomothetic research designs with repeated measures in several breeds of dogs, we discovered stable constitutional differences in psychophysiologic reactions to repeated exposure to psychologically stressful situations. Some dogs showed high psychophysiologic adaptation (HA dogs). Other dogs developed persistent psychophysiologic reactions to the psychologically aversive environment: tachycardia, polypnea, profuse salivation, high energy metabolism and muscle tension, and high urinary vasopressin and catecholamines (low adaptation or LA dogs). Retrospective analysis of the development and extinction of cardiac and respiratory orienting reflexes (OR) in these two types of dogs revealed that the LA dogs exhibit higher frequency and more intense, persistent and highly fluctuating (poorly modulated) cardiac and respiratory OR than the HA dogs, which show rapid OR habituation and good modulation. Insofar as one may extrapolate these data to human subjects, recording dynamics of development and habituation and degree of modulation of visceral OR may facilitate early detection of individuals at risk for cardiorespiratory and other psychovisceral disorders.


Subject(s)
Orientation , Personality Assessment , Reflex , Animals , Avoidance Learning , Conditioning, Psychological , Dogs , Heart/physiology , Psychophysics/methods , Psychophysiologic Disorders/etiology , Respiratory Physiological Phenomena , Risk
7.
Act Nerv Super (Praha) ; Suppl 3(Pt 2): 351-72, 1982.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6892141

ABSTRACT

We previously described stable constitutional differences in psychophysiologic reactions of dogs exposed repeatedly to psychologically stressful situations induced by Pavlovian conditioning techniques with electrocutaneous reinforcement. Some dogs (e.g., most beagles and other hounds, and some mongrels) showed high psychophysiologic adaptation (HA dogs). Other dogs (e.g., many wirehair fox terriers, border collies, German shepherds, cocker spaniels, and some mongrels) developed persistent, almost inextinguishable psychophysiologic reactions to the entire Pavlovian aversive room complex: tachycardia, polypnea, profuse salivation, vasopressin release, high energy metabolism, and high urinary catecholamines (low adaptation or LA dogs). Analysis of the development and extinction of cardiac and respiratory orienting reflexes (O.R.) in these two types of dogs indicates that the LA dogs exhibit higher frequency and more intensive, persistent, and highly fluctuating (poorly modulated) cardiac and respiratory O.R.s than those exhibited by the HA dogs, which show rapid O.R. habituation and good modulation. Insofar as one may extrapolate these data to human subjects, recording of the dynamics of the development and habituation and the degree of modulation of visceral orienting reflexes may facilitate the early detection of individuals at risk for cardio-respiratory and other psychovisceral disorders.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/psychology , Heart/physiopathology , Orientation/physiology , Psychophysiologic Disorders/physiopathology , Reflex/physiology , Respiration , Animals , Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics , Conditioning, Psychological , Disease Susceptibility , Dogs , Humans , Psychophysiologic Disorders/genetics , Species Specificity
10.
Psychother Psychosom ; 31(1-4): 161-71, 1979.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-482535

ABSTRACT

Selye refers to stress as 'the nonspecific response of the body to any demand made upon it'. Our experimental data indicate that: (1) there are significant constitutional differences in the types of stress reactions exhibited by different breeds of dogs; (2) inability to achieve an adaptive consummatory response or to develop a sense of control over stressful situations may lead in susceptible individuals (low adaptation dogs) to the development of maladaptive distress reactions, evidenced by persistent psychovisceral turmoil; (3) such maladaptive distress reactions represent a physiologic substrate of anxiety and frustration; (4) exposure of the low adaptation dogs to similar stressors but under conditions where the animals can develop avoidance responses, inhibited the psychovisceral disturbances, suggesting that it is the inability to develop control over psychosocially aversive situations that is primarily responsible for psychophysiologic disorders.


Subject(s)
Psychophysiologic Disorders/etiology , Stress, Physiological/physiopathology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Adaptation, Psychological , Animals , Anxiety , Disease Models, Animal , Dogs , Frustration , Humans , Psychophysiologic Disorders/genetics , Stress, Physiological/complications , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology
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