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1.
Arch Int Physiol Biochim ; 97(2): 163-74, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2476094

ABSTRACT

Male Wistar rats sustaining prefrontal cortex aspiration or sham operation at 6 days or 30 days of age were submitted to the following behavioural tests: open-field, acquisition and retention of two-way active as well as passive avoidance tasks. In the open-field the locomotor activity proved enhanced in all the aspirated animals and this enhancement lasted for 30 days. In the two-day active avoidance task, an acquisition deficit was observed in both aspirated groups; but when retrained one month later, they were able to acquire the avoidance task like sham-operated rats and no difference appeared between the groups aspirated at 6 or at 30 days of age. Concerning the passive avoidance task, no difference could be detected between aspirated and sham-operated animals of both groups except that the rats aspirated at an early age (6 days) seemed to display a better avoidance ability in the retention test. These behavioural alterations (hyperactivity and impairment of the acquisition of the 2-way active avoidance) resulted from the prefrontal cortex aspiration, at whatever age this aspiration was performed (6 days or 30 days). They disappeared after a postoperative recovery period of about one month, as evidenced by this longitudinal study.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Animals, Newborn/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Frontal Lobe/physiology , Animals , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Frontal Lobe/growth & development , Male , Motor Activity/physiology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
2.
Neurochem Int ; 8(3): 339-43, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20493063

ABSTRACT

Electrical stimulation eliciting self-stimulation behavior from postero-lateral hypothalamic implanted electrode was controlled by factors that control normal feeding. In this idea, lateral hypothalamic stimulation possessed an appetite whetting property and this is experienced as rewarding. The octapeptide cholecystokinin, a gut hormone, has been experimented upon to produce the complete behavioral sequence of satiety in rats. We observed that an i.p. injection of caerulein (an analog of cholecystokinin) did decrease, in a dose-related manner, the rate for brain self-stimulation. However, a similar effect on the rate of ICSS was measured after a bilateral cut of the vagus nerve at a subdiaphragmatic level. This result suggests that the decreasing effect on ICSS after an i.p. injection of caerulein is not strictly related to feeding. We interpret the decrease of reinforcement induced by caerulein as the action of a general satiety for any object presenting a rewarding value for behavior.

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