Artigo de Periódico
Effect of central acute administration of cadmium on drinking behavior
Fecha
1996Registro en:
0091-3057
v3 53, n. 3
Autor
Silva, E. de Castro E
Ferreira, H.
Cunha, M.
Bulcão, C.
Sarmento, Clarissa
Oliveira, I. de
Fregoneze, J. B.
Silva, E. de Castro E
Ferreira, H.
Cunha, M.
Bulcão, C.
Sarmento, Clarissa
Oliveira, I. de
Fregoneze, J. B.
Institución
Resumen
The effect of acute third ventricle cadmium administration on the drinking behavior of adult male rats under different situations was studied. Injections of cadmium chloride (0.07, 0.7, and 7.0 ng/rat) significantly attenuated water intake in dehydrated rats. Drinking behavior induced by acute intracerebroventricular injections of carbachol (2 μg/rat) or angiotensin II (5 ng/rat) was also inhibited by central cadmium injections. Cadmium-induced blockade in water intake in dehydrated animals was reverted by the previous administration of a S-HT2 antagonist (RP62203) in different doses (5 and 10 μg/rat). The data clearly reveal that cadmium elicits very fast actions on the central nervous system. It is suggested that cadmium-induced attenuation of water intake may rely on at least three different mechanisms: impairment of cholinergic and angiotensinergic systems in the brain and stimulation of a central serotonergic drive acting on 5-HT2 receptors. The study of cadmium neurotoxicity by observation of drinking behavior, a behavioral parameter easy to be recorded and measured, is proposed.