Learned preferences induced by electrical stimulation of a food-related area of the parabrachial complex: effects of naloxone
Metadatos
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Simón Ferre, María José; García, Raquel; Zafra Palma, María Ángeles; Molina, Filomena; Puerto Salgado, AmadeoEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2007-03Resumen
Electrical stimulation of the External Lateral Parabrachial Subnucleus (LPBe), a food-related area, induced behavioral preferences for
associated stimuli in a taste discrimination learning task. Although this stimulation appeared to be ineffective to elicit standard lever press self-stimulation, it induced place preference for one of two training compartments of a rectangular maze in which animals (adult male Wistar rats) received concurrent electrical brain stimulation. In subjects that consistently showed a preference behavior in different trials, administration of the opioid antagonist naloxone (4 mg/ml/kg) blocked concurrent learning when the test was made in a new maze but not in the same maze in which animals had learned the task. These results are discussed in terms of the possible participation of the LPBe subnucleus in different natural and artificial brain reward systems.