Chronic stress sensitizes frontal cortex dopamine release in response to a subsequent novel stressor: reversal by naloxone

1999 
The present study examined the influence of an early chronic variable stress procedure with or without concurrent naloxone administration at different doses (1, 2 or 3 mg/kg, i.p.) on stress (restraint)-induced dopamine release in the frontal cortex in vivo. A higher increase in cortical dopamine release in response to a subsequent restraint event was observed in chronically stressed rats as compared with those without chronic stress exposure. Naloxone pretreatment normalized this sensitized response only at the higher dose (3 mg/kg, i.p.). The present results indicate that cortical dopamine response to a novel and uncontrollable stressor sensitizes after exposure to a chronic variable stress procedure and that an endogenous opiate mechanism, presumably activated during chronic stress, may be involved in the development of such a sensitization process.
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