raclopride and Mouth-Diseases

raclopride has been researched along with Mouth-Diseases* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for raclopride and Mouth-Diseases

ArticleYear
Persistent spontaneous oral dyskinesias in haloperidol-withdrawn rats neonatally lesioned with 6-hydroxydopamine: absence of an association with the Bmax for [3H]raclopride binding to neostriatal homogenates.
    The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 1997, Volume: 280, Issue:1

    To investigate the influence of dopamine (DA) nerves on haloperidol (HAL)-induced oral dyskinesias, rats were first injected at 3 days after birth with 6-hydroxydopamine HBr (200 micrograms i.c.v., salt form; 6-OHDA) or vehicle, after desipramine HCl (20 mg/kg i.p., 1 hr) pretreatment. Two months later HAL (1.5 mg/kg/day, 2 days a week for 4 weeks, then daily for 10 months) was added to the drinking water of half the rats. Numbers of vacuous chewing movements, recorded in 1-min increments every 10 min for 1 hr, increased from < 5 to about 17 oral movements per session in intact rats, 14 weeks after instituting HAL (P < .01 vs. intact rats drinking tap water). In HAL-treated 6-OHDA-lesioned rats, oral activity increased to > 30 oral movements per session (P < .01 vs. HAL-treated intact rats). These levels of oral activity persisted in intact and 6-OHDA-lesioned rats as long as HAL was administered. After 11 months of HAL treatment, but 8 or 9 days after HAL withdrawal, DA was found to be reduced 97%, whereas serotonin was increased 29% in the striatum of 6-OHDA-lesioned rats. In HAL-treated intact and lesioned rats the Bmax for DA D2 binding sites was elevated about 70%. With reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, the mRNA level for DA D2L but not D2S receptors was also found to be elevated about 70%. In a fraction of 6-OHDA-lesioned rats that were observed for 8 months after HAL withdrawal, oral activity persisted without decrement and was not accompanied by a change in the Bmax or mRNA level for DA D2 receptors. These findings demonstrate that in rats largely DA-denervated as neonates, long-term HAL treatment produces an unusually high number of oral movements that persists for 8 months after HAL withdrawal and is not accompanied by an increase in DA D2 receptor expression.

    Topics: Animals; Antipsychotic Agents; Biogenic Monoamines; Corpus Striatum; Dopamine; Dopamine Antagonists; Dyskinesia, Drug-Induced; Mouth Diseases; Oxidopamine; Raclopride; Rats; Receptors, Dopamine D2; Receptors, Serotonin; RNA, Messenger; Salicylamides

1997