2004
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-003-1577-9
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Gender difference in the prevention of hyperanxiety in adult prenatally stressed rats by chronic treatment with amitriptyline

Abstract: Chronic early treatment with amitriptyline can prevent the development of hyperanxiety in PS rats in adulthood. This effect is only detectable after cessation of drug treatment. The anxiolytic effect is more readily detected in females.

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Cited by 19 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Other studies also illustrate that the exposure to prenatal DEX or behavioral stress alters 5-HT neurotransmission and 5-HT receptor binding in various forebrain regions that receive major input from the raphe nucleus (Slotkin et al, 1996, McGrath et al, 1997, Muneoka et al, 1997, Slotkin et al, 2006, Slotkin and Seidler, 2010, Van den Hove et al, 2014). Evidence that pre-pubertal treatment with an antidepressant is able to block despair-like behavior in adulthood (Poltyrev and Weinstock, 2004, Weinstock, 2008) also is consistent with the idea that changes during development can impact behavior later in life.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…Other studies also illustrate that the exposure to prenatal DEX or behavioral stress alters 5-HT neurotransmission and 5-HT receptor binding in various forebrain regions that receive major input from the raphe nucleus (Slotkin et al, 1996, McGrath et al, 1997, Muneoka et al, 1997, Slotkin et al, 2006, Slotkin and Seidler, 2010, Van den Hove et al, 2014). Evidence that pre-pubertal treatment with an antidepressant is able to block despair-like behavior in adulthood (Poltyrev and Weinstock, 2004, Weinstock, 2008) also is consistent with the idea that changes during development can impact behavior later in life.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%