Cognitive Performance of MDMA-Treated Rhesus Monkeys.
Sensitivity to Serotonergic Challenge

by
Taffe MA, Davis SA, Yuan J, Schroeder R,
Hatzidimitriou G, Parsons LH, Ricaurte GA, Gold LH.
Department of Neuropharmacology,
The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA
Neuropsychopharmacology 2002 Dec;27(6):993-1005


ABSTRACT

Recreational users of (+/-)3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, "Ecstasy") exhibit poor performance on a number of neurocognitive measures, with tests of memory and attention most commonly affected. Cognitive impairments can be persistent or possibly permanent, since users who have been abstinent from MDMA for many months are also impaired. Repeated treatment of rats or nonhuman primates with MDMA has consistently been demonstrated to produce specific, lasting depletions of brain serotonin (5-HT) markers, a potential source of such cognitive symptoms. We have shown, however, that monkeys treated with a regimen of MDMA (4 days, 10 mg/kg i.m., b.i.d.), sufficient to produce a 50% reduction of the 5-HT metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid in cerebrospinal fluid, do not exhibit lasting deficits in a range of cognitive domains. Acute drug challenges are often effective at unmasking consequences of amphetamine toxicity. Here, the performance of MDMA-treated and control monkeys on tests of spatial working memory (self-ordered spatial search), vigilance and reaction time (5-choice reaction time), reinforcer efficacy and sustained attention (progressive ratio responding) and fine motor control (bimanual motor skill task) was challenged with ketanserin (0.1-1.7 mg/kg, i.m.), 1-(3-Chlorophenyl)piperazine dihydrochloride (mCPP, 0.03-0.5 mg/kg, i.m.) and (+/-)8-hydroxy-DPAT hydrobromide (8-OH-DPAT, 0.032-0.1 mg/kg, i.m.). MDMA-exposed animals exhibited increased sensitivity to challenge with mCPP on the reaction time and progressive ratio tasks but otherwise were equivalently sensitive to drug challenge. Post-mortem analysis demonstrated that 76-93% reductions of 5-HT in neocortex persist 17-20 months post-MDMA. These observations suggest that large depletions of brain 5-HT produced by MDMA can persistently alter behavioral sensitivity to the disrupting effects of serotonergic agents.

History
Serotonin
MDMA/MDE
Controversies
Protect and survive
Serotonin-releasers
Dorsal raphe neurons
The serotonin syndrome
Para-chlorophenylalanine
Ecstasy and the pineal gland
Serotonin, MDMA and the heart
Ecstasy and serotonin synthesis
Post-E serotonergic axonal resprouting
MDMA and serotonin transporter densities


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