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1.
Wiad Lek ; 50 Suppl 1 Pt 1: 298-302, 1997.
Article in Polish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9446371

ABSTRACT

Sclerotherapy of esophageal varices is a procedure which caries high risk of DIC and ARDS syndrome induced by intravenous administration of obliterative agent. The aim of the study was to investigate hematological and arterial and venous gasometric parameters before and after injection of 5% ethanolamine oleate (EO) to the esophageal varices. These investigations were carried out in 9 patients with liver cirrhosis (Child B and C) and in 7 dogs witch were infused with EO to the inferior vena cava. Both patients and animals had the values of pAO2, pVO2, satAO2, satVO2 and platelets count decreased but pACO2 and pVCO2 increased after injection of EO. PhA and phV values increased only in investigated patients but not in dogs in which decreased values of Hb, HT and RBC after EO injection were found. This observation was not confirmed in the treated patients. Conducted investigations show that EO injections to the venous system causes significant changes in the pulmonary function in humans as well as in the dogs.


Subject(s)
Oleic Acids/adverse effects , Pulmonary Gas Exchange/drug effects , Sclerosing Solutions/adverse effects , Sclerotherapy/adverse effects , Adult , Animals , Blood Gas Analysis , Carbon Dioxide/blood , Dogs , Esophageal and Gastric Varices/therapy , Female , Humans , Infusions, Intravenous , Male , Middle Aged , Oleic Acids/administration & dosage , Oxygen/blood , Platelet Count , Sclerosing Solutions/administration & dosage
2.
Brain Res ; 692(1-2): 143-53, 1995 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8548298

ABSTRACT

Chronic intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) infusion of 3.2 micrograms/day of nerve growth factor (NGF) in normal rats elevated choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity of the striatum, medial septum, and basal forebrain and improved performance of a conditioned taste aversion (CTA) task. Relative to bovine serum albumin (BSA) or Cytochrome C treatments, NGF treatment facilitated acquisition and prolonged extinction of a lithium chloride (LiCl)-induced saccharin aversion. This facilitation was evident at saccharin/LiCl intervals ranging up to 1 h. Also, NGF treatment did not increase reactivity to LiCl-induced illness and neither shifted detection thresholds nor altered hedonic reactions to taste stimuli, indicating that NGF did not produce simple changes in sensory function. NGF treatments that elevate ChAT also facilitate memory of CTA in normal, adult rats.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Nerve Growth Factors/pharmacology , Taste/drug effects , Animals , Choline O-Acetyltransferase/metabolism , Food Preferences/drug effects , Injections, Intraventricular , Lithium Chloride/pharmacology , Memory/drug effects , Neostriatum/drug effects , Neostriatum/enzymology , Nerve Growth Factors/administration & dosage , Prosencephalon/drug effects , Prosencephalon/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Saccharin/pharmacology , Sweetening Agents/pharmacology
3.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav ; 31(3): 579-84, 1988 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3251241

ABSTRACT

Four experiments tested the conditioning effects of caffeine. Flavor and place cues were paired with IP caffeine injections and followed by tests for cue preference. In Experiment 1A, saccharin was paired with 1.25, 5 or 20 mg/kg of caffeine. In Experiment 1B, caffeine was delivered 30 min before, 5 min before, or 30 min after saccharin. Dose- and time-dependent conditioned taste aversions were produced. In Experiment 2, a place and taste cue were paired simultaneously with 5 or 20 mg/kg of caffeine. Conditioned place and taste aversions developed at 20, but not at 5 mg/kg. In Experiment 3, a place cue alone was paired with 0, 5, or 20 mg/kg of caffeine; dose-dependent conditioned place aversions developed. In Experiment 4, place and taste cues were paired with control treatments: pH-buffered caffeine, purine or vehicle. Caffeine produced taste aversions whereas the purine and vehicle did not. These aversive conditioning effects of caffeine across a variety of situations, doses and temporal arrangements stand in contrast to results obtained with other psychoactive drugs, such as amphetamine and alcohol.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Caffeine/pharmacology , Conditioning, Psychological/drug effects , Animals , Cues , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Male , Purines/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Reaction Time , Saccharin/administration & dosage , Taste
4.
Appetite ; 6(3): 253-64, 1985 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3000293

ABSTRACT

Studies in which conditioned taste aversion was used as a non-lethal method to suppress coyote predation are reviewed in light of the controversy that surrounds such research. It is concluded that the negative results obtained to date may have been due to theoretical and methodological problems in the studies. Uncritical acceptance of those results has slowed progress on an effective and inexpensive method of coyote management.


Subject(s)
Appetitive Behavior/drug effects , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Chlorides/toxicity , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Lithium/toxicity , Predatory Behavior/drug effects , Taste/drug effects , Animals , Carnivora , Lithium Chloride , Research
5.
Behav Neurosci ; 98(5): 813-9, 1984 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6487415

ABSTRACT

The synergistic interaction between odor and taste in flavor-toxicosis conditioning was tested in two experiments. The temporal interval between a 2-min odor and a 2-min taste was varied for thirsty rats licking at a water spout. In the first experiment, taste was presented at time zero, and odor was presented at -10, -1, 0, 1 and 10 min to independent groups in a simple compartment. In the second experiment, taste was presented at 0, and odor was presented at -5, -2, and 0 min in a "wind tunnel" apparatus. The results indicated that odor alone is an ineffective conditioned stimulus for a toxic unconditioned stimulus under our conditions, simultaneous (0-min) presentation of odor with taste potentiates the odor component so that it becomes more effective than the taste component, a 2-min interval between odor and taste attenuates potentiation, and a 5-min interval disrupts the effect, and the interaction in asymmetrical, that is, odor has no such systematic effect on the conditioning of taste.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Odorants , Poisons , Smell/physiology , Taste/physiology , Animals , Cues , Discrimination Learning/physiology , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
6.
Recent Dev Alcohol ; 2: 59-79, 1984.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6729172

ABSTRACT

We propose that alcohol is a food and that drinking alcohol is fundamentally a feeding habit. Many feeding habits are acquired by Pavlovian conditioning in which the flavor of food [conditioned stimulus (CS)] is adjusted by the aftereffects of the ingested meal [unconditioned stimulus (US)]. Thus, repletion of nutritive deficits or recuperation from illness enhances flavor palatability, whereas toxicosis or nausea reduces it. After reviewing the major functional and neurophysiological features of this homeostatic conditioning process, we relate them to the flavor (CS) and effect (US) of alcohol. We present evidence suggesting that the caloric effects of low-dose alcoholic drinks may help to establish and maintain alcohol habits through conditioned palatability changes. Included is a general treatment of the antagonistic interactions between such homeostatic conditioning and the behavioral mechanisms used to defend again peripheral insults such as electric shock. In closing, we discuss the implications for modifying alcoholic habits.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Drinking , Alcoholism/psychology , Taste , Alcoholic Intoxication/psychology , Association Learning , Avoidance Learning , Conditioning, Classical , Feeding Behavior , Humans , Smell
7.
Behav Neural Biol ; 39(2): 160-80, 1983 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6322739

ABSTRACT

Feeding experiences were varied in developing rats and the effects upon flavor neophobia and lithium chloride-induced flavor aversions were observed. In Experiment 1, nursing experience of neonate rats was reduced by artificial feeding via intragastric cannula; the rats then were tested with apple juice paired with lithium chloride injection at weaning or maturity. Conditioned aversions were not affected, but neophobia to novel apple juice was attenuated in artificially-reared rats tested at maturity. In Experiment 2, rats received enriched feeding experience after weaning, which consisted of (a) obtaining many complex flavors, a few of which were paired with poisoning, effortlessly in the home cage, or (b) foraging for various foods on an elevated maze. No dramatic effects on neophobia or conditioned taste aversion for saccharin water were apparent. In Experiment 3, rats were given experience after weaning with vanilla-scented water either paired or unpaired with quinine water, and then tested with the odor of almond or that odor compounded with saccharin water for neophobia and lithium-induced aversions. Flavor-experienced rats exhibited more pronounced odor conditioning and more resistance to extinction of the odor aversion after both simple and compound conditioning. In contrast, saccharin taste aversions were relatively unchanged. Apparently, enriched feeding and drinking experience facilitates the utilization of odor more than taste cues.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning , Conditioning, Classical , Smell , Taste , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Chlorides/poisoning , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Cues , Drinking/drug effects , Extinction, Psychological/drug effects , Female , Lithium/poisoning , Lithium Chloride , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Smell/drug effects , Social Environment , Taste/drug effects
9.
Behav Neural Biol ; 37(1): 61-75, 1983 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6309134

ABSTRACT

Taste and odor have different properties in toxiphobic conditioning. When each is used alone, taste becomes aversive when followed by immediate or delayed poison, while odor becomes aversive only if followed by immediate poison. However, if odor and taste are presented as a compound and followed by delayed poison, then odor does become aversive when tested alone. It is as if taste has potentiated the odor signal. Several experiments assessed the role of the amygdala in this potentiation effect by anesthetizing the amygdala with 10% novocaine. Novocaine applied 30 min before presentation (Pre-CS) of an odor-taste compound disrupted the potentiated odor aversion but not the taste aversion. In contrast, novocaine applied 1 min after the compound odor-taste or 1 min prior to LiCl poison did not dissociate odor and taste aversions; both odor and taste aversions were facilitated. Novocaine applied 30 min before an odor alone also disrupted an odor aversion induced by immediate LiCl. But identical treatment did not disrupt odor avoidance conditioned by immediate foot-shock, suggesting that amygdala anesthesia does not simply produce anosmia. Pre-CS novocaine treatment also disrupted flavor neophobia prior to conditioning. The results suggest that novocaine applied to the amygdala disrupts the integration of odor with taste and illness during toxiphobic conditioning.


Subject(s)
Amygdala/drug effects , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Procaine/pharmacology , Smell/drug effects , Taste/drug effects , Animals , Association Learning/drug effects , Chlorides/poisoning , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Electroshock , Lithium/poisoning , Lithium Chloride , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
10.
J Comp Physiol Psychol ; 96(5): 775-80, 1982 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6292268

ABSTRACT

The contribution of nonassociative neophobia and sensitization to the potentiation of odor by taste in rats was tested in three experiments. In Experiment 1, neophobia for almond odor (O), saccharin taste (T), and odor-taste compound (OT) cues was tested before and after noncontingent lithium chloride poisoning and compared with conditioned aversions produced by OT-LiCl temporal pairing. The OT compound potentiated unconditioned neophobia, but there was no evidence of poison-enhanced neophobia, disinhibition of neophobia, or sensitization by noncontingent LiCl; temporal pairing produced aversions for the compound and its elements. In Experiment 2, generalization to a novel odor was tested after O-LiCl or compound OT-LiCl pairing. The potentiated odor aversion did not generalize to the novel odor; it was specific to the odor paired with taste and LiCl. In Experiment 3, potentiation of the odor component by a discriminant or nondiscriminant taste component was tested. Potentiation was evident only when a novel discriminant taste was in compound with odor prior to LiCl poisoning. These studies support an associative "indexing" hypothesis of the potentiation effect in rats.


Subject(s)
Association Learning , Learning , Smell , Taste , Animals , Association Learning/drug effects , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Chlorides/poisoning , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Drinking/drug effects , Learning/drug effects , Lithium/poisoning , Lithium Chloride , Male , Odorants , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Smell/drug effects , Taste/drug effects
12.
J Comp Physiol Psychol ; 96(4): 527-39, 1982 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6288778

ABSTRACT

Potentiation of odor by taste in rats was tested in a variety of situations. In three experiments, almond odor and saccharin taste were presented either as a single conditioned stimulus (CS) or as a compound CS and followed by either toxic lithium chloride or footshock. Extinction tests with the almond and saccharin components were then given. In single CS-toxin experiments, taste was more effective than odor, and after compound conditioning, the taste component potentiated the odor component. Conversely, in single CS-shock experiments, odor was more effective than taste, and after compound conditioning, no potentiation was observed. Rather, interference effects were observed. In Experiments 1 and 2, the addition of taste disrupted odor CS-shock conditioning, and in Experiment 3, odor interfered with taste CS-shock conditioning. Visceral feedback is apparently a necessary unconditioned stimulus for the potentiation of odor by taste. These data support the neural convergence and gating hypothesis of flavor aversion conditioning.


Subject(s)
Association Learning/drug effects , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Chlorides/poisoning , Learning/drug effects , Lithium/poisoning , Smell/drug effects , Taste/drug effects , Animals , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Cues , Drinking/drug effects , Electroshock , Lithium Chloride , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
13.
J Comp Physiol Psychol ; 96(4): 540-8, 1982 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6288779

ABSTRACT

Two experiments evaluated the contribution of the gustatory neocortex (GN) to the potentiation of odor by taste during illness-induced aversions in rats. In Experiment 1, rats lacking GN and control rats were given an odor, a taste, or an odor-taste compound cue followed by intragastric gavage of lithium chloride. Prior to conditioning, neophobia for flavored solutions was absent in rats with GN lesions. After pairing with LiCl, GN rats developed normal conditioned odor aversions (Experiment 1B), whereas conditioned taste aversions were attenuated (Experiment 1A) or totally blocked (Experiment 1B). Potentiation of odor by taste after compound conditioning was evident in both control and GN rats, although GN lesions attenuated the effect slightly in Experiment 1B. In Experiment 2, normal rats were given compound conditioning to induce potentiated odor aversions and then given GN lesions prior to tests with the odor and taste components. Taste aversion retention was disrupted totally by GN ablation; potentiated odor aversions were retained by both groups, although the GN group extinguished faster. Gustatory neocortex ablations produced differential effects on odor and taste, disrupting taste memorial and associative processes but leaving odor conditioning and the potentiation of odor by taste processes relatively unaffected. Integrity of the GN apparently is not necessary for the acquisition or retention of potentiation odor aversions.


Subject(s)
Association Learning/physiology , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Learning/physiology , Smell/physiology , Taste/physiology , Animals , Chlorides/poisoning , Cues , Drinking/drug effects , Lithium/poisoning , Lithium Chloride , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Retention, Psychology/physiology
14.
J Comp Physiol Psychol ; 95(1): 114-22, 1981 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7217406

ABSTRACT

Results from three experiments indicate that severing the subdiaphragmatic vagus in rats increased the rate of extinction of learned taste aversions. In Experiment 1, although vagotomized rats acquired a saccharin aversion equivalent to that of controls when the illness-inducing agent was the blood-borne toxin apomorphine, vagotomized rats tended to consume more saccharin than controls during repeated extinction tests. In Experiment 2, vagotomy disrupted retention and increased extinction of a preoperatively acquired saccharin aversion. Disruptions were found when the taste aversion was induced by copper sulfate, a local gastric irritant (Experiment 2A), or apomorphine, a systemic toxin (Experiment 2B); in each experiment vagotomized rats consumed more saccharin than controls on the first retention test and extinguished the prior to surgery. Experiment 3 demonstrated that vagotomy did not affect retention or extinction of a shock-induced conditioned emotional response (lick to suppression) to noise. It is concluded that integrity of the vagus is not necessary for acquisition of a learned taste aversion when a blood-borne toxin is used as the ill-inducing agent. However, the vagus apparently mediates an integral portion of the conditioned response following taste-illness acquisition regardless of whether the illness agent is a local gastric irritant or a systemic toxin.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Taste/physiology , Vagus Nerve/physiology , Afferent Pathways/physiology , Animals , Brain Stem/physiology , Male , Rats , Vagotomy, Proximal Gastric
17.
Science ; 208(4445): 753-5, 1980 May 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7367891

ABSTRACT

When either taste or odor alone was followed by poison, rats acquired a strong aversion for the taste but not for odor, especially if poison was delayed. When odor-taste combinations were poisoned, however, odor aversions were potentiated, as if odor could gain the enduring memorial property of taste by associative contiguity.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/physiology , Smell/physiology , Taste/physiology , Animals , Conditioning, Psychological/physiology , Lithium/poisoning , Male , Rats , Time Factors
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