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Journal ArticleDOI

The tail suspension test: A new method for screening antidepressants in mice

Lucien Steru, +3 more
- 01 Jan 1985 - 
- Vol. 85, Iss: 3, pp 367-370
TLDR
A novel test procedure for antidepressants was designed in which a mouse is suspended by the tail from a lever, the movements of the animal being recorded, and the test can separate the locomotor stimulant doses from antidepressant doses.
Abstract
A novel test procedure for antidepressants was designed in which a mouse is suspended by the tail from a lever, the movements of the animal being recorded. The total duration of the test (6 min) can be divided into periods of agitation and immobility. Several psychotropic drugs were studied: amphetamine, amitriptyline, atropine, desipramine, mianserin, nomifensine and viloxazine. Antidepressant drugs decrease the duration of immobility, as do psychostimulants and atropine. If coupled with measurement of locomotor activity in different conditions, the test can separate the locomotor stimulant doses from antidepressant doses. Diazepam increases the duration of immobility. The main advantages of this procedure are the use of a simple, objective test situation, the concordance of the results with the validated "behavioral despair" test from Porsolt and the sensitivity to a wide range of drug doses.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The tail suspension test as a model for assessing antidepressant activity: review of pharmacological and genetic studies in mice.

TL;DR: The tail suspension test is a useful test for assessing the behavioural effects of antidepressant compounds and other pharmacological and genetic manipulations relevant to depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurogenesis-Dependent and -Independent Effects of Fluoxetine in an Animal Model of Anxiety/Depression

TL;DR: A mouse model of an anxiety/depressive-like state induced by chronic corticosterone treatment is described, and mice deficient in one of these genes, beta-arrestin 2, displayed a reduced response to fluoxetine in multiple tasks, suggesting that beta-Arrestin signaling is necessary for the antidepressant effects of fluoxettine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex-specific programming of offspring emotionality after stress early in pregnancy.

TL;DR: The results indicate that stress experience early in pregnancy may contribute to male neurodevelopmental disorders through impacts on placental function and fetal development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional antagonists at the NMDA receptor complex exhibit antidepressant actions

TL;DR: The hypothesis that pathways subserved by the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptors are involved in the pathophysiology of affective disorders may have heuristic value and that substances capable of reducing neurotransmission at theNMDA receptor complex may represent a new class of antidepressants is investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transneuronal Propagation of Pathologic α-Synuclein from the Gut to the Brain Models Parkinson's Disease.

TL;DR: This study supports the Braak hypothesis in the etiology of idiopathic Parkinson's disease by assessing α- synucleinopathy in the brain in a novel gut-to-brain α-syn transmission mouse model, where pathologicalα-syn preformed fibrils were injected into the duodenal and pyloric muscularis layer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of inescapable shock on subsequent escape performance: catecholaminergic and cholinergic mediation of response initiation and maintenance.

TL;DR: It was hypothesized that both DA and NE, as well as ACh, are involved in the escape deficit observed after inescapable shock, and that these transmitters mediate the interference by their influence on response initiation and maintenance, rather than on associative or cognitive processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Searching-Waiting Strategy: A Candidate for an Evolutionary Model of Depression?

TL;DR: The model proposed here assumes that depressive disorders could reflect an extreme state of a current behavioral strategy, namely, infant response to maternal separation in monkeys and "behavioral despair" in rodents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forced swimming in rats: hypothermia, immobility and the effects of imipramine.

TL;DR: Rats when forced to swim in a restricted space not only became immobile but showed marked hypothermia, which can be dissociated from the immobility occurring in these conditions and also from drug-induced Hypothermia.
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