Lisa E. Kalynchuk

Lisa E. Kalynchuk
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • University of Victoria

About

102
Publications
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3,964
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Current institution
University of Victoria

Publications

Publications (102)
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Treatment with the synaptic plasticity protein reelin has rapid antidepressant-like effects in adult corticosterone (CORT)-induced depressed rats, whether administered repeatedly or acutely. However, these effects remain unexplored in the context of post-partum depression (PPD). Methods This study investigated the antidepressant-like...
Article
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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) accounts for most dementia cases, but we lack a complete understanding of the mechanisms responsible for the core pathology associated with the disease (e.g., amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangles). Inflammation has been identified as a key contributor of AD pathology, with recent evidence pointing towards Reelin dysre...
Article
Full-text available
Novel antidepressants are predominantly evaluated preclinically in rodent models of chronic stress in which animals experience a single prolonged exposure to chronic stress prior to treatment. Rodent models of a single episode of chronic stress translate poorly to human depressive disorders, which are commonly marked by recurring depressive episode...
Article
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Current pharmacological treatments for depression fail to produce adequate remission in a significant proportion of patients. Increasingly, other systems, such as the microbiome–gut–brain axis, are being looked at as putative novel avenues for depression treatment. Dysbiosis and dysregulation along this axis are highly comorbid with the severity of...
Article
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Over the past decade, ketamine, an NMDA receptor antagonist, has demonstrated fast-acting antidepressant effects previously unseen with monoaminergic-based therapeutics. Concerns regarding psychotomimetic effects limit the use of ketamine for certain patient populations. Reelin, an extracellular matrix glycoprotein, has shown promise as a putative...
Article
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Reelin, an extracellular matrix protein with putative antidepressant-like properties, becomes dysregulated by chronic stress. Improvement in cognitive dysfunction and depression-like behavior induced by chronic stress has been reported with both intrahippocampal and intravenous Reelin treatment but the mechanisms responsible are not clear. To deter...
Article
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A healthy diet has been highly associated with a decreased risk for mental health problems such as major depression. Evidence from human studies shows that diet can influence mood but there is a poor understanding of the molecular mechanisms behind these effects, especially the role of epigenetic alterations in the brain. Our objective was to use t...
Article
Repeated exposure to the stress hormone corticosterone results in depressive-like behaviours paralleled by the downregulation of hippocampal reelin expression. Reelin is expressed in key neural populations involved in the stress response, but whether its hypothalamic expression is sex-specific or involved in sex-specific vulnerability to stress is...
Article
Chronic stress is a significant risk factor for depression onset. The effects of chronic stress can be studied preclinically using a corticosterone (CORT)-administration paradigm that results in a phenotype of depressive-like behavior associated with neurochemical abnormalities in brain regions like the hippocampus. We have recently shown that intr...
Article
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Methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) is a transcriptional regulator that is highly abundant in the brain. It binds to methylated genomic DNA to regulate a range of physiological functions implicated in neuronal development and adult synaptic plasticity. MeCP2 has mainly been studied for its role in neurodevelopmental disorders, but alterations in M...
Article
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Teaser The development of AMPA receptor (AMPAR) modulators as therapeutics has been fraught with challenges. However, recent advances, such as novel chemokines and modulators and high-throughput screening approaches to drug discovery, hold considerable promise for advancing the field. Glutamatergic transmission is widely implicated in neuropsychiat...
Article
The symptoms of human depression often include cognitive deficits. However, cognition is not frequently included in the behavioral assessments conducted in preclinical models of depression. For example, it is well known that repeated corticosterone (CORT) injections in rodents produce depression-like behavior as measured by the forced swim test, su...
Article
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As patient-oriented research gains popularity in clinical research, the lack of patient input in foundational science grows more evident. Research has shown great utility in active partnerships between patient partners and scientists, yet many researchers are still hesitant about listening to the voices of those with lived experience guide and shap...
Article
Mitochondria are responsible for providing our cells with energy, as well as regulating oxidative stress and apoptosis, and considerable evidence demonstrates that mitochondria-related alterations are prevalent during chronic stress and depression. Here, we discuss how chronic stress may induce depressive behavior by potentiating mitochondrial allo...
Chapter
Affective disorders, including major depression and bipolar disorder, are thought to stem from alterations in neurotransmitter transduction pathways, but recent evidence implicates broader forms of dampened neural plasticity, inflammation, and points to a possible important role on mitochondrial alterations. Mitochondria modulate proper brain funct...
Article
Full-text available
Depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide, which necessitates novel therapeutics and biomarkers to approach treatment of this neuropsychiatric disorder. To assess potential mechanisms underlying the fast-acting antidepressant actions of ketamine we used a repeated corticosterone paradigm in adult male rats to assess the effects of ket...
Article
Depression is recognized as a highly chronic and recurrent disorder. Each successive episode increases susceptibility to future relapses. The current study aimed to develop an animal model of chronic stress relevant to human recurrent depression in order to examine possible neurobiological mechanisms behind this increased vulnerability. We hypothes...
Article
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The present report examines the effects of repeated or single intrahippocampal reelin infusions on measures of depressive-like behavior, cognition, and hippocampal neurogenesis, in the repeated-corticosterone (CORT) paradigm. Rats received subcutaneous injections of CORT for three weeks and reelin was infused through an inserted canula in the left...
Article
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There is an utmost necessity of developing novel biomarkers of depression that result in a more efficacious use of current antidepressant drugs. The present report reviews and discusses a recent series of experiments that focused on analysis of membrane protein clustering in peripheral lymphocytes as putative biomarkers of therapeutic efficacy for...
Article
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Human and animal studies suggest an intriguing relationship between the immune system and the development of depression. Some peripherally produced cytokines, such as TNF-α, can cross the blood brain barrier and result in activation of brain microglia which produces additional TNF-α and fosters a cascade of events including decreases in markers of...
Article
Full-text available
Naïve depression patients show alterations in serotonin transporter (SERT) and serotonin 2A (5HT2A) receptor clustering in peripheral lymphocytes, and these alterations have been proposed as a biomarker of therapeutic efficacy in major depression. Repeated corticosterone (CORT) induces a consistent depression-like phenotype and has been widely used...
Data
Appendix S1. Behavioral CDE and CRF files. The CDE and CRF modules linked to this article can be found and downloaded as a zip folder.
Article
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Human and animal studies suggest an intriguing link between mitochondrial diseases and depression. Although depression has historically been linked to alterations in monoaminergic pharmacology and adult hippocampal neurogenesis, new data increasingly implicate broader forms of dampened plasticity, including plasticity within the cell. Mitochondria...
Article
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The provided companion has been developed by the Behavioral Working Group of the Joint Translational Task Force of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) and the American Epilepsy Society (AES) with the purpose of assisting the implementation of Preclinical Common Data Elements (CDE) for studying and for reporting neurobehavioral comorbid...
Article
Full-text available
Depression is a serious psychiatric disorder frequently comorbid with autoimmune disorders. Previous work in our lab has demonstrated that repeated corticosterone (CORT) injections in rats reliably increase depressive-like behavior, impair hippocampal-dependent memory, reduce the number and complexity of adult-generated neurons in the dentate gyrus...
Article
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Background The pattern of serotonin transporter clustering on the plasma membrane of lymphocytes extracted from human whole blood samples has been identified as a putative biomarker of therapeutic efficacy in major depression. Here we evaluated the possibility of performing a similar analysis using blood smears obtained from rats, and from control...
Article
Repeated exposure to high levels of stress hormones can enhance contextual and discrete fear conditioning in rats. A common belief is that this enhanced fear memory is largely mediated by the amygdala because both contextual and discrete fear conditioning are dependent on an intact amygdala. However, trace fear conditioning is thought to be amygdal...
Poster
Full-text available
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most common form of epilepsy and the most resistant to antiepileptic drugs. TLE is complicated by the presence of psychiatric and cognitive comorbidities. Common complaints that represent comorbid states of TLE patients are anxiety, depression, memory deterioration, and panic attacks. These comorbidities are sign...
Article
Because stress is a significant risk factor for depression, many animal models of depression employ chronic stress as a precipitating event. However, almost without exception, stress-induced animal models of depression focus on a single bout of depression and therefore, they do not provide any means to understand the typical cycling of mood observe...
Poster
Full-text available
Temporal lobe epilepsy is associated with impaired cognition, but the mechanisms by which this occurs remain unclear. Here, we investigated whether seizures that originate in different brain regions have differential effects on hippocampal-dependent learning and memory and the recruitment of adult-generated neurons into memory networks. To accompli...
Article
The vulnerability and plasticity of hippocampal GABAergic interneurons is a topic of broad interest and debate in the field of epilepsy. In this experiment, we used the electrical kindling model of epilepsy to determine whether seizures that originate in different brain regions have differential effects on hippocampal interneuron subpopulations. Lo...
Article
Full-text available
The finding that reelin expression is significantly decreased in mood and psychotic disorders, together with evidence that reelin can regulate key aspects of hippocampal plasticity in the adult brain, brought our research group and others to study the possible role of reelin in the pathogenesis of depression. This review describes recent progress o...
Article
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Background We have shown that serotonin transporter (SERT) clustering in blood lymphocytes is altered in major depression and correlates with pharmacological therapeutic responses measured with the Hamilton scale. In the present report, we extend these results to the self-assessment anhedonia scale, as anhedonia is a cardinal symptom of major depre...
Article
Seizures dramatically increase the number of adult generated neurons in the hippocampus. However, it is not known whether this effect depends on seizures that originate in specific brain regions or whether it is nonspecific to seizure activity regardless of origin. We used kindling of different brain sites to address this question. Rats received 99...
Article
Chronic exposure to the stress hormone corticosterone (CORT) is known to alter plasticity within hippocampal and amygdalar circuits that mediate fear learning and memory. The purpose of this experiment was to clarify the effects of chronic CORT on Pavlovian fear conditioning, which is dependent on intact hippocampal and amygdalar activity. In parti...
Article
Repeated corticosterone (CORT) treatment induces a deficit in dentate gyrus subgranular zone reelin-positive cells, in maturation of newborn neurons, and results in a consistent depressive-like behavior. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes are not known in detail. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the eff...
Article
Epileptic seizures negatively affect cognition. However, the mechanisms that contribute to cognitive impairments after seizures are largely unknown. Here, we examined the effects of long-term kindling (i.e., 99 stimulations) of limbic (basolateral amygdala, dorsal hippocampus) and non-limbic (caudate nucleus) brain sites on conditioned fear and hip...
Article
Background In a previous report, we showed that the clustering of serotonin (5HT) transporter (SERT) protein on cell membranes of peripheral lymphocytes predicts responsivity to antidepressant medication in two subpopulations of naïve depression patients (Rivera-Baltanas et al., J Affect Disord, 2012, 137:46–55). In this study, we extended this ide...
Article
Full-text available
Amygdala kindling is well known to increase unconditioned fear and anxiety. However, relatively little is known about whether this form of kindling causes functional changes within the neural circuitry that mediates fear learning and the retrieval of fear memories. To address this issue, we examined the effect of short- (i.e., 30 stimulations) and...
Article
In recent reports we have shown that the analysis of clustering of the serotonin transporter (SERT) and the serotonin 2A receptor in blood lymphocytes allows to differentiate two subpopulations of naïve depression patients (D-I and D-II) that will show different therapeutic responses to antidepressant medication as ascertained by the evaluation of...
Article
We have hypothesized that the extracellular matrix protein reelin is involved in the pathogenesis of major depression. This hypothesis is based on previous work in which we showed that repeated exposure to the stress hormone corticosterone, which increases depression-like behavior in rodents, also decreases the number of reelin+ cells in specific r...
Article
We investigated the effect of two well characterized preclinical animal models of depression – repeated injections of corticosterone (CORT) and repeated restraint stress – on markers of GABAergic and glutamatergic activity in the hippocampus and amygdala. Stress is an identified risk factor for the onset of major depression, but the neurobiological...
Article
Introduction: Animal Models of Brain Disorders The Case of Epilepsy Conclusion Acknowledgments References
Article
Introduction: Overview and Concepts of Epigenetics Epigenetics and Brain Disorders: General Concepts Conclusion References
Article
Serotonin transporter (SERT) binding is decreased in lymphocytes of depression patients and this decrease is partially reversed by antidepressant medication. However, recent evidence has shown that clustering of SERT on cell membranes is very important for receptor functionality. Alteration in SERT clustering on peripheral lymphocytes does not affe...
Article
The personality trait neuroticism predicts depression and suicidal thoughts. Neuroticism is also linked to mood instability (MI)1Mood instability/variability.1 that is common in patients with depression. This study investigated (a) whether MI predicts suicidal thoughts in depressed patients and (b) the relationship of MI to neuroticism. All 129 pat...
Article
We examined a potential two-hit murine animal model of depression by assessing whether a genetic deficit in reelin increases vulnerability to the depressogenic effects of the stress hormone corticosterone. Stress is an identified risk factor for the onset of depressive symptoms, but depression also has a significant genetic component, suggesting th...
Article
Stress is a critical environmental trigger for the development of clinical depression, yet little is known about the specific neurobiological mechanisms by which stress influences the development of depressive symptomatology. Animal models provide an efficient way to study the etiology of human disorders such as depression, and a number of preclini...
Article
Full-text available
Reelin is an extracellular matrix protein expressed in several interneuron subtypes in the hippocampus and dentate gyrus. Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is also expressed by interneurons in these areas. We investigated whether reelin and nNOS are co-localized in the same population of hippocampal interneurons, and whether this colocalization...
Article
Stress is an important risk factor for the emergence of depression, but little is known about the neurobiological mechanisms by which stress might promote depressive symptomatology. Much of the research on this topic has focused on stress-induced changes in hippocampal plasticity, specifically the idea that decreased hippocampal plasticity could be...
Article
Full-text available
Temporal lobe seizures can induce the proliferation and abnormal migration of newly generated dentate granule cells, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms that govern these pathological events. Reelin and DISC1 (disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1) are proteins that play a regulatory role in the maturation and integration of new neurons in th...
Article
Full-text available
Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) is a candidate gene involved in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. DISC1 expression is particularly abundant in the adult dentate gyrus, in which decreased levels lead to aberrant growth, impaired migration, and accelerated integration of adult generated neurons. Because seizures can also result in similar chang...
Article
Full-text available
We have recently shown that repeated high dose injections of corticosterone (CORT) reliably increase depression-like behavior on a modified one-day version of the forced swim test. The main purpose of this experiment was to compare the effect of these CORT injections on our one-day version of the forced swim test and the more traditional two-day ve...
Chapter
Full-text available
Psychiatric comorbidities are common in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). This article will focus on interictal anxiety, which is a problem for a large proportion of patients with TLE and is difficult to control. We will briefly review important findings from preclinical and clinical research on this topic. We will then focus on our own research, in wh...
Article
Full-text available
In contrast to most stressors that appear to be proconvulsant in nature, forced swimming (or swim stress) produces substantial anticonvulsant effects. Here we describe a series of experiments designed to identify the specific factors of swim stress (e.g., duration, swimming behavior, water temperature, and frequency of exposure) that are essential...
Article
Full-text available
Long-term amygdala kindling dramatically increases fearful behavior in both male and female rats. In this experiment, we studied the relation between sex, kindled fear behavior, and synapsin I immunoreactivity in various brain regions. Male and female adult Long-Evans rats received either 99 left amygdala kindling stimulations or sham stimulations....
Article
Full-text available
There are critical postnatal periods during which even subtle interventions can have long-lasting effects on adult physiology. We asked whether an immune challenge during early postnatal development can alter neuronal excitability and seizure susceptibility in adults. Postnatal day 14 (P14) male Sprague Dawley rats were injected with the bacterial...
Article
Full-text available
Stress is recognized to precipitate depressive illness, yet the specific relationship between stress, glucocorticoids and depression is not well understood. We have recently shown that repeated corticosterone (CORT) injections reliably increase depression-like behavior on the forced-swim test in rats, suggesting that glucocorticoids can precipitate...
Article
Amygdala kindling in rats increases fear behavior. The neural correlates of this fear are not well understood. In this experiment, we investigated the relation between serotonin receptor binding and mRNA expression and fearful behavior in amygdala-kindled rats. Rats received either 100 kindling stimulations or sham stimulations, and their fear beha...
Article
Repeated stress is an important risk factor for the development of depression. However, the mechanism by which stress influences depression is largely unknown, in part due to the fact that few animal models of repeated stress produce robust changes in depression-like behavior. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the effect of repea...
Chapter
A number of interictal behavioral co-morbidities accompany temporal lobe epilepsy. These co-morbidities range from fear and anxiety to depression and memory loss. For many patients, these behavioral disturbances pose a greater problem than the seizures themselves, because they can disable patients to the point where they cannot work or sustain norm...
Article
Full-text available
This experiment examined the effect of repeated corticosterone injections on anxiety and depression-like behavior in male and female rats. Rats received either corticosterone or vehicle injections for 21 consecutive days prior to behavioral testing in the forced swim, open-field, and predator odor tests. The corticosterone injections significantly...
Article
The overall objective of the present experiment was to assess sex differences in the effects of repeated restraint stress on fear-induced defensive behavior and general emotional behavior. Groups of male and female Long-Evans rats received either daily restraint stress (stressed) or daily brief handling (nonstressed) for 21 consecutive days. On day...
Article
Full-text available
The purpose of this experiment was to determine the effect of prior environmental enrichment on the acquisition of kindling and the expression of kindling-induced fear. Sixty male rats were housed either in an enriched environment or in isolation, starting immediately after weaning. As adults, they were subjected to either 50 amygdala-kindling stim...
Article
Amygdala kindling dramatically increases fearful behavior in rats. Because kindling-induced fear increases in magnitude as rats receive more stimulations, kindling provides an excellent model for studying the nature and neural mechanisms of fear sensitization. In the present experiment, we studied whether the development of kindling-induced fear is...
Article
Modeling fear in animals is a critical approach for identifying the neural mechanisms involved in human disorders such as generalized anxiety and panic. Amygdala kindling has proven useful in this regard because it produces dramatic increases in fearful behavior. The purpose of this experiment was to compare the behavioral effects of kindling in ma...
Article
The neural excitability characteristic of kindling has been linked to structural alterations such as mossy fiber sprouting and synaptic reorganization within the hippocampus. Recent evidence suggests that growth factors may play a key role in kindling-related synaptic plasticity. Insulin-like growth factors-I and -II (IGF-I/-II) and insulin are str...
Article
Kindling dramatically increases fearful behavior in rats. Because kindling-induced fear increases in magnitude as rats receive more stimulations, kindling provides a superb opportunity to study the nature and neural mechanisms of fear sensitization. Interestingly, these changes in behavior are accompanied by increased binding to inhibitory receptor...
Article
Temporal lobe epileptics often experience profound interictal (i.e. between seizure) emotional disturbances, such as fear, anxiety, and depression. Although the presence of this interictal emotionality has been well documented, little progress has been made in identifying its precise nature and cause because it is not amenable to experimental analy...
Article
Long-term amygdala kindling produces substantial changes in emotional behavior in rats. The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether kindling-induced emotionality is fundamentally defensive or aggressive in nature. In Experiment 1, amygdala-kindled rats tested as intruders in a resident-intruder paradigm preferred an active defense str...
Article
Full-text available
Long-term amygdala kindling produces substantial changes in emotional behavior in rats. The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether kindling-induced emotionality is fundamentally defensive or aggressive in nature. In Experiment 1, amygdala-kindled rats tested as intruders in a resident–intruder paradigm preferred an active defense str...
Article
Full-text available
Three groups of amygdala-kindled rats received 10 bidaily treatment trials: On each trial, the drug-before group received a diazepam (2.5 mg/kg i.p.) injection 1 hr before a convulsive stimulation, the drug-after group received a diazepam injection 1 hr after a stimulation, and the vehicle control group received a vehicle injection either 1 hr befo...
Article
Tolerance to anticonvulsant drug effects on kindled convulsions can result from drug exposure alone, but convulsive activity during drug exposure has a substantial facilitatory effect on tolerance development. Tolerance produced by drug exposure in the absence of a criterion response (in this case convulsions) has been termed pharmacologic toleranc...
Article
Long-term amygdala kindling in rats results in large and reliable increases in emotional behaviour that model the interictal emotionality often observed in temporal lobe epileptics [Kalynchuk L. E. et al. (1997) Biol. Psychiat.41, 438–451; Pinel J. P. J. et al. (1977) Science197, 1088–1089]. These experiments investigated the persistence of these k...
Article
Long-term amygdala kindling in rats produces increases in emotionality (Kalynchuk et al., Biol. Psychiatry, 41 (1997) 438-451). The present experiment was conducted to investigate whether this hyperemotionality is specific to amygdala kindling or whether it can be produced by kindling other structures. Rats received 99 convulsive or sham stimulatio...
Chapter
Epilepsy is a chronic disorder that is characterized by spontaneously recurring sei-zures. There are several different forms of epilepsy. Of these, temporal lobe epilepsy rep-resents the biggest problem: It is the most prevalent form of epilepsy, comprising 55% of all cases in adults; it is the most resistant to treatment; and it is often character...
Article
Full-text available
Prenatal ethanol exposure can produce cognitive and behavioral impairments. In the present study, rats from prenatal ethanol (E), pair-fed (PF), and ad libitum–fed control (C) treatment conditions were tested on the object-recognition delayed-nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS) task with nonrecurring items and on the spatial-navigation Morris water maze t...
Article
The effects of long-term amygdala kindling on emotional behavior were investigated. In Experiment 1, rats received 99 basolateral amygdala, central amygdala, or sham stimulations. The rats in both kindled groups displayed more resistance to capture from an open field and more open-arm activity on an elevated plus maze than did the sham control rats...
Article
Full-text available
Four groups of amygdala-kindled rats were exposed lo 15 daily tolerance-development trials. On each trial, 1 group received diazepam (2.5 mg/kg IP) 1 hr before a convulsive stimulation, 1 group received diazepam 1 hr after a stimulation, 1 group received 15 diazepam injections but no stimulation, and a combined control group received 15 vehicle inj...
Article
We assessed the effect of an ascending-dose regimen on the development of tolerance to the anticonvulsant and ataxic effects of pentobarbital in four groups of amygdala-kindled rats. Each rat received 20 bidaily (one every 48 h) trials in which an intraperitoneal (IP) pentobarbital or vehicle injection was delivered l h before a convulsive amygdala...
Article
The kindled-convulsion model of epilepsy was used to study contingent tolerance to ethanol's (1.5 g/kg; IP) anticonvulsant, hypothermic, and ataxic effects in adult male rats. In the present experiments, three groups of amygdala-kindled rats received a series of bidaily (one every 48 h) convulsive stimulations: one group received ethanol 1 h before...
Article
The effect of convulsive stimulations on the dissipation of tolerance to the anticonvulsant effect of diazepam was investigated using the kindled-convulsion model. Amygdala-kindled rats were rendered tolerant to diazepam's anticonvulsant effect by 25 "bidaily" (one/48 h) diazepam injections (2.5 mg/kg), each followed 1 h later by a convulsive stimu...
Article
Full-text available
The effect of an ascending dose regimen on the development of tolerance to diazepam's anticonvulsant effect was assessed. During the 22 trials of the tolerance development phase, amygdala-kindled rats received either a series of dosage injections ranging from high (10 mg/kg), to low (1.0 mg/kg), and ascending (1.0 mg/kg and increased by 0.2-mg/kg i...
Article
In a non-matching-to-sample task, rats were trained according to the conventional procedure in which the displacement of the sample object resulted in food reinforcement and termination of the sample period. Compared to these animals, rats given a longer duration sample period, and rats not reinforced with food for displacing the object in the samp...

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