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Increased Vulnerability to Stress Following Opiate Exposures: Behavioral and Autonomic Correlates.
Authors:Blatchford, Kate E.   Diamond, Keri   Westbrook, R. Frederick   McNally, Gavan P.
Abstract:The authors used rats to study the impact of a history of opiate exposures on behavioral and autonomic responses to restraint stress. Brief restraint (30 min) provoked tachycardia and a pressor response, anxiety (as indexed by social interaction), grooming, and reduced exploration. The pressor response was reduced at 1 day, but not 7 days, after last opiate exposure; tachycardia was unaffected (Experiment 1). Stress-induced anxiety was potentiated 1 and 7 days after last opiate exposure (Experiment 2), and this potentiation was a function of dose (Experiment 3) and duration (Experiment 4) of opiate exposure. The results show that a history of opiate exposures alters vulnerability to stress and has implications for understanding coping, anxiety, and emotionality in former opiate users. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:stress   opiate   blood pressure   heart rate   anxiety   stress vulnerability   behavioral responses   autonomic responses
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