Amphetamine and morphine produce a conditioned taste and place preference in the house musk shrew (Suncus murinus). |
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Authors: | Parker, Linda A. Corrick, Marion L. Limebeer, Cheryl L. Kwiatkowska, Magdalena |
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Abstract: | Rats have been shown to avoid consuming a flavor, but prefer a location, previously paired with amphetamine or morphine. A series of 4 experiments evaluated the hedonic properties of amphetamine and morphine in the house musk shrew (Suncus murinus), an insectivore that (unlike rats) is capable of vomiting when exposed to toxins. Unlike rats, amphetamine (20 mg/kg) and morphine (20 mg/kg) produced both a conditioned sucrose (0.3 M) and saccharin (0.1%) preference in shrews (administered intraperitoneally), when measured by both a 1-and a 2-bottle test. At the same dose, both drugs also produced a place preference in shrews. These results suggest that the potential of rewarding drugs to produce taste avoidance may vary on the basis of the ability of the species to vomit. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | amphetamine morphine conditioned taste preference place preference ability to vomit when exposed to toxins taste avoidance house musk shrew |
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