Rationale: It is difficult to assess withdrawal from benzodiazepines, and preclinical assessment of behaviour during social conflict
offers the opportunity to quantify tolerance and withdrawal by measuring aggressive, defensive and social behaviour. The relationship
between benzodiazepine withdrawal symptoms and the development of tolerance is not well understood. Are withdrawal symptoms
dependent on the development of tolerance?
Objective: The aim of the present study was to compare the development of tolerance to alprazolam effects on the behavioural repertoire
during the social conflict test in mice, and to determine whether or not behavioural changes during alprazolam withdrawal
are correlated with the development of tolerance.
Methods: An experimental model consisting of interactions of pairs of singly housed male mice with non-aggressive group-housed male
mice was used. Alprazolam (1 mg/kg) was given orally once or repeatedly (twice daily) for 8 or 21 days. Behaviour was measured,
based on videoanalysis, in aggressive mice before treatment, 30 min or 3 days after the last dose, respectively.
Results: A single administration of alprazolam significantly reduced aggressive activities and increased social investigation without
changing locomotion or other behaviour. Tolerance developed to the inhibitory effects of alprazolam on aggressive behaviour
but not to the effects of alprazolam to increase social investigation. When withdrawn from alprazolam, mice exhibited less
social investigation and locomotion while aggression tended to be increased.
Conclusions: Tolerance to the alprazolam effects on aggressive and social behaviour developed at different rates suggesting that they
are differentially regulated. Furthermore, the evidence of withdrawal responses appearing in a behaviour to which tolerance
had not developed does suggest that tolerance and withdrawal phenomena are dissociated in benzodiazepines.
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal Tolerance Alprazolam Aggression Anxiety
Electronic Publication