Mesotelencephalic dopamine system and reproductive behavior in the female rat: Effects of ventral tegmental 6-hydroxydopamine lesions on maternal and sexual responsiveness.The effects of lesions to the mesolimbic dopamine system on maternal and sexual behaviors in the female rat was assessed. Rat dams that were given ventral tegmental area microinfusions of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) during lactation showed a persistent deficit in pup retrieval but were not impaired with respect to nursing, nest building, or maternal aggression. In addition, 6-OHDA-lesioned females failed to respond to amphetamine by showing locomotor hyperactivity. Administration of the dopamine blocker raclopride to neurologically intact dams also inhibited pup retrieval but had no effect on nursing. Females given 6-OHDA during pregnancy appeared completely unresponsive to pups, whereas no maternal deficits were seen in females that received 6-OHDA 8 weeks before parturition. Proceptive (hopping and darting) and receptive (lordosis) components of sexual behavior, assessed after ovariectomy and exogenous steroid hormone treatment, were not affected by mesolimbic 6-OHDA lesions.
Mesotelencephalic dopamine system and reproductive behavior in the female rat: Effects of ventral tegmental 6-hydroxydopamine lesions on maternal and sexual responsiveness.Executive function and memory in posttraumatic stress disorder: a study of Bosnian war veteransMaida Koso, Stefan Hansen|European Psychiatry|2005 The present study assessed neuropsychological functions related to attention, executive function and everyday memory in a group of men with a diagnosis of combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Twenty Bosnian male combat veterans with a diagnosis of PTSD were tested using the Sustained Attention to Response Task, the Hayling Sentence Completion Test, the Trail Making Test, Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (verbal scales). Their performance was compared with age- and IQ-matched male war veterans with no PTSD. The study disclosed pervasive cognitive impairments with large effect sizes pertaining to attention, working memory, executive function, and memory. The effects did not appear to be attributable to alcohol abuse, loss of consciousness, or educational level. We speculate that, in the present group of combat veterans, PTSD was associated with dysfunction of a higher-level attentional resource which in turn affected the activity in other systems concerned with memory and thought.
Food intake, aggression, and fear behavior in the mother rat: Control by neural systems concerned with milk ejection and maternal behavior.Stefan Hansen, Annabel Ferreira|Behavioral Neuroscience|1986 Mother rats eat more, are more aggressive, and show less fear behavior (freezing) than during other stages of the reproductive cycle. Electrolytic lesions in the peripeduncular area of the lateral midbrain made nursing mother rats eat less and interact peacefully with male intruders. This midbrain area forms part of the ascending milk-ejection pathway, so it seems plausible that the suckling stimulus maintains hyperphagia and aggression in mother rats. Because no alteration in fear behavior was observed in mothers with lesions, it was predicted that the reduction in freezing was related primarily to maternal responsiveness to pup cues other than suckling. In line with this hypothesis, it was found that the experimental induction of maternal behavior in ovariectomized, hormone-treated females was associated with a significant decrease in fear behavior, with no concomitant changes in food intake or aggression.
Metyrapone-induced suppression of corticosterone synthesis reduces ethanol consumption in high-preferring ratsClaudia Fahlke, Ernest Hȧrd, Rosita Thomasson et al.|Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior|1994