Chronic Food Deprivation Decreases Extracellular Dopamine in the Nucleus Accumbens: Implications for a Possible Neurochemical Link Between Weight Loss and Drug Abuse

1995 
In rats reduced to 80% of normal body weight (n=9), the basal levels of extracellular dopamine (DA) in the nucleus accumbens (NAC), as determined by microdialysis, decreased significantly to 33 % (mean ± SEM) of their normal baseline (p<.01). Basal extracellullar DA did not change significantly over a matching 3-week period in controls (n=7). No changes were observed in NAC serotonin after weight reduction. These results indicate that parts of the mesolimbic DA system are depressed in underweight rats. The observed decrease in basal DA may be responsible for a variety of behavioral changes observed in undernourished humans and animals including the tendency to eat and gain weight when food becomes available. Given that DA can be released in the NAC when rats self-inject drugs of abuse, the present findings may help explain why animals increase drug intake when they are underweight.
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