Abstract | Rats were treated for one year with either trifluoperazine dihydrochloride (2.5–3.5 mg/kg/day) or thioridazine dihydrochloride (30–40 mg/kg/day) when prolactin levels were measured in comparison to animals treated acutely with a single oral bolus of the same drugs in approximately the same dose. Serum prolactin levels at the end of the year of neuroleptic treatment with either drug remained elevated compared to those in control animals, and the elevation was no different from that obtained by administration of an equivalent acute single oral bolus. In contrast, the inhibition of apomorphine-induced stereotypy produced by the acute administration of either drug disappeared during chronic treatment, to be replaced after a year's neuroleptic administration by a supersensitive response. Similarly, the increase in dopamine turnover produced by acute neuroleptic administration, evidenced by raised striatal 3, 4-dihydroxy-phenylacetic acid (DOPAC) levels, also disappeared at the end of a year's treatment, when specific binding of 3H-spiperone to striatal homogenates indicated an increased number of dopamine receptors. The disappearance of evidence of blockade of striatal dopamine receptors, which appeared to become supersensitive during a year's chronic treatment with either trifluoperazine or thioridazine, contrasts with the persistence of the effect of these drugs on serum prolactin levels. |
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