Publication | Closed Access
Long-Term Treatment with Lithium Prevents the Development of Dopamine Receptor Supersensitivity
287
Citations
22
References
1978
Year
Behavioral Dopaminergic SupersensitivityPsychopharmacologyBehavioral SensitivitySocial SciencesMolecular PharmacologyLong-term TreatmentPsychoactive DrugDopaminergic Receptor SensitivityPsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceDopamine Receptor SupersensitivityNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemDopaminePharmacologyDopamine ResearchLithium PreventsFunctional SelectivityNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Long-term treatment of rats with haloperidol produced an increased sensitivity to the locomotor and stereotypic effect of apomorphine. This behavioral dopaminergic supersensitivity was accompanied by increased binding of [3H] spiroperidol in the striatum. Rats treated concurrently with lithium and haloperidol failed to develop both behavioral sensitivity to apomorphine and increased striatal dopamine receptor binding. The ability of lighium to prevent recurrent manicdepressive episodes may be related, in part, to its ability to stabilize dopaminergic receptor sensitivity.
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