The antianxiety effect of beta-blockers on punished responding

Lynn A. Durel*, David S. Krantz, James E. Barrett

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

Clinically effective anxiolytic drugs generally increase responding that is suppressed by punishment. Although beta-adrenergic antgonists have been reported to reduce anxiety in humans, such effects have not been reported reliably in animal punishment procedures. In the present study, three pigeons were trained to key peck under a multiple schedule. In the presence of a white light every thirtieth response produced grain. In the presence of a red light very thirtieth response produced grain and electric shock which suppressed responding to approximately 10 percent of that occurring in the alternate component. Propranolol (1.0-5.6 mg/kg) and, less reliably, atenolol significantly increased punished responding in a dose-related manner; propranolol effects were approximately twice as large as those of atenolol. Both drugs no more than weakly increased unpunished response rates at doses that increased punished responding. These results suggest that (1) beta-blockers have an antianxiety effect on punished behavior, and that (2) peripheral beta-blockade, the predominant action of beta-blockers regardless of whether they readily penetrate the brain, is likely to be involved in this effect.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)371-374
Number of pages4
JournalPharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior
Volume25
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1986

Keywords

  • Anxiety
  • Anxiolytic drugs
  • Atenolol
  • Behavioral effects
  • Beta-blockers
  • Propranolol
  • Punished responding

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