Sex-specific brain deficits in auditory processing in an animal model of cocaine-related schizophrenic disorders
Brain Sciences, ISSN: 2076-3425, Vol: 3, Issue: 2, Page: 504-520
2013
- 7Citations
- 36Captures
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Metrics Details
- Citations7
- Citation Indexes7
- CrossRef6
- Captures36
- Readers36
- 36
Article Description
Cocaine is a psychostimulant in the pharmacological class of drugs called Local Anesthetics. Interestingly, cocaine is the only drug in this class that has a chemical formula comprised of a tropane ring and is, moreover, addictive. The correlation between tropane and addiction is well-studied. Another well-studied correlation is that between psychosis induced by cocaine and that psychosis endogenously present in the schizophrenic patient. Indeed, both of these psychoses exhibit much the same behavioral as well as neurochemical properties across species. Therefore, in order to study the link between schizophrenia and cocaine addiction, we used a behavioral paradigm called Acoustic Startle. We used this acoustic startle paradigm in female versus male Sprague-Dawley animals to discriminate possible sex differences in responses to startle. The startle method operates through auditory pathways in brain via a network of sensorimotor gating processes within auditory cortex, cochlear nuclei, inferior and superior colliculi, pontine reticular nuclei, in addition to mesocorticolimbic brain reward and nigrostriatal motor circuitries. This paper is the first to report sex differences to acoustic stimuli in Sprague-Dawley animals (Rattus norvegicus) although such gender responses to acoustic startle have been reported. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Bibliographic Details
MDPI AG
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