Increased Vulnerability to Stress Following Opiate Exposures: Behavioral and Autonomic Correlates. |
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Authors: | Blatchford, Kate E. Diamond, Keri Westbrook, R. Frederick McNally, Gavan P. |
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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) |
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Keywords: | stress opiate blood pressure heart rate anxiety stress vulnerability behavioral responses autonomic responses |
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