Exploring the Associative Determinants of Tolerance to the Effects of Cannabis on Locomotion
Professor Advisor
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Miguez Cavieres, Gonzalo Javier
Author
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Varas P., Felipe
Admission date
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2024-12-23T14:50:10Z
Available date
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2024-12-23T14:50:10Z
Publication date
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2023
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/202383
Abstract
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Abstract
Experimental evaluation of cannabis tolerance has to date lacked an associative
approximation, focusing primarily on physiological variables. The present study assessed
acute effects, chronic tolerance, and contextual specificity, exploring a potential associative
component underlying cannabis tolerance. Sixteen adult Sprague-Dawley rats of both sexes
were assigned to two groups, one receiving vaporized administrations of cannabis and the
other receiving the vehicle substance, in two different (counterbalanced) contexts. An initial
measurement was performed to assess acute effects, followed by four measurements to
evaluate the development of chronic tolerance, and a final measurement to test the context
specificity of tolerance, comparing the responses to the usual administration context and a
novel context. Ten behaviors were analyzed in an open field. Acute effects were observed in
seven indicators, corresponding to greater locomotor activity in the group that received the
drug compared to the control group. In five of these, the data also showed the development of
chronic tolerance to the effects of cannabis on locomotion, which was indicated by a
progressive decrease in locomotor activity in the drug group. However, no evidence of
context specificity was found in any of the variables in which chronic tolerance was
observed. We discuss factors that may be related to the lack of contextual specificity of
cannabis tolerance. Together, our findings show that a single administration of cannabis
induces acute effects, and its consecutive consumption develops chronic tolerance to these
effects, reaching a hypolocomotor state.
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Universidad de Chile
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Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States