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Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior 2009-Aug

Antidepressant-like effects of paroxetine are produced by lower doses than those which produce nausea.

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Katharine J Tuerke
Francesco Leri
Linda A Parker

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Abstract

Paroxetine is prescribed to treat depression, but it also produces nausea. The potential of animal models to detect nauseating, antidepressant-like, and rewarding/aversive effects of paroxetine were assessed. In Experiments 1 (spaced conditioning trials) and 3 (massed conditioning trials), a dose of 30 mg/kg, but not lower doses (3 and 10 mg/kg) of paroxetine produced conditioned gaping reactions (reflective of nausea) in the Taste Reactivity (TR) test. In Experiment 2, when administered 23.5, 5 and 1 h prior to a 5 min forced swim test (FST) a dose as low as 3 mg/kg of paroxetine increased swimming and decreased immobility (reflective of antidepression) compared to controls. In Experiment 3, neither 10 nor 30 mg/kg of paroxetine produced a conditioned floor preference/aversion, but both doses decreased activity during conditioning trials. These results suggest that paroxetine produced an antidepressant-like effect at a lower dose (3 mg/kg) than that necessary to produce nausea (30 mg/kg). The TR test may be beneficial for assessing the side effect of nausea in preclinical tests of new compounds.

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