4.1 Article

Effects of Pramipexole on Impulsive Choice in Male Wistar Rats

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 267-276

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0019244

Keywords

pramipexole; D2/D3 agonist; impulsivity; choice; gambling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [DA023564, DA 020669]

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Clinical reports, primarily with Parkinson's disease patients, note an association between the prescribed use of pramipexole (and other direct-acting dopamine agonist medications) and impulse control disorders, particularly pathological gambling. Two experiments examined the effects of acute pramipexole on rats' impulsive choices where impulsivity was defined as selecting a smaller sooner over a larger later food reward. In Experiment I, pramipexole (0.1 to 0.3 mg/kg) significantly increased impulsive choices in a condition in which few impulsive choices were made during a stable baseline. In a control condition, in which impulsive choices predominated during baseline, pramipexole did not significantly change the same rats' choices. Experiment 2 explored a wider range of doses (0.01 to 0.3 mg/kg) using a choice procedure in which delays to the larger later reinforcer delivery increased across trial blocks within each session. At the doses used in Experiment I, pramipexole shifted choice toward indifference regardless of the operative delay. At lower doses of pramipexole (0.01 and 0.03 mg/kg.), a trend toward more impulsive choice was observed at the 0.03 mg/kg dose. The difference in outcomes across experiments may be due to the more complex discriminations required in Experiment 2, that is, multiple discriminations between changing delays within each session.

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