The influence of caffeine on nicotine's discriminative stimulus, subjective, and reinforcing effects. |
| |
Authors: | Perkins, Kenneth A. Fonte, Carolyn Stolinski, Amy Blakesley-Ball, Richard Wilson, Annette S. |
| |
Abstract: | Caffeine may acutely alter the discriminative stimulus and subjective effects of nicotine, perhaps explaining the association of coffee intake with smoking status. In this study, smokers were initially trained to discriminate 20 μg/kg nicotine by nasal spray from placebo (0). Then, generalization of nicotine discrimination was tested, using both 2- and 3-choice ("novel" option) procedures, across a range of doses (0-20 μg/kg) following pretreatment with 0, 2.5, and 5.0 mg/kg caffeine p.o. Nicotine reinforcement was assessed after the end of generalization testing using a choice procedure. Caffeine pretreatment did not alter nicotine discrimination and self-administration. Caffeine and nicotine influenced some subjective and cardiovascular responses, but there were no interaction effects except for diastolic blood pressure. These results do not support the notion that caffeine acutely alters nicotine's discriminative stimulus, subjective, or reinforcing effects. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
| |
Keywords: | nicotine caffeine drug discrimination reinforcement subjective effects cardiovascular effects smokers |
|
|