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Challenge dose of methamphetamine affects kainic acid-induced seizures differently depending on prenatal methamphetamine exposure, sex, and estrous cycle

Publication at Third Faculty of Medicine |
2010

Abstract

Even though it is obvious that glutamate plays an important role in the effect of psychostimulants on seizures, the role of non-NMDA receptors remains uncertain. The aim of the present study was to determine whether acute methamphetamine (MA) administration changes sensitivity to seizures induced with kainic acid in prenatally MA-exposed adult rats.

Adult male and female rats (prenatally MA exposed, prenatally saline exposed, and controls) were divided into groups that received a challenge dose (1 mg/kg) of MA and groups that did not receive the MA challenge (saline injected). Systemic administration of 15 mg/kg kainic acid was used as a seizure model.

Our results demonstrated that a single injection of MA (1 mg/kg) affects kainic acid-induced seizures differently depending on prenatal exposure, sex, and female estrous cycle. Even though daily injections of MA (5 mg/kg) in maternal rats did not have a long-term effect on susceptibility to seizures induced with kainic acid in adult progeny, sensitivity to the challenge dose of MA differed between the prenatal exposure groups.