Kapás L, Obál
F Jr, Alfoldi P, Rubicsek G, Penke B, Obál F
Brain Res. 1988 438(1-2):155-64 Rats received an i.p. injection
of cholecystokinin-octapeptide sulfate ester (CCK; 4, 10 or 50 micrograms/kg)
or physiological saline at dark onset, and the 24-h sleep-wake cycle (12-h-dark
and 12-h-light phases), spontaneous motor activity and brain temperature
(Tbr) were recorded. EEG activity was studied through spectral analysis
for 2.5 h, and food intake was measured at the end of postinjection hour
1. In response to CCK, non-REM sleep increased at the expense of wakefulness,
and the sleep-promoting effect was substantiated by an increase in EEG
slow-wave activity. Motor activity, Tbr and food intake decreased. The
effects vanished in postinjection hour 2; the diurnal rhythms were not
modified. The changes varied as a function of the dose: the effects were
significant following 10 micrograms/kg, and even higher in response to
50 micrograms/kg CCK. The results indicate that i.p. CCK definitely promotes
non-REM sleep. This effect may belong to the behavioral sequence elicited
by the peptide, which is often attributed to satiety. As evidenced by the
reduction of Tbr, CCK also exerts strong autonomic actions, which might
interfere with the behavioral responses.
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