4.5 Article

Pica caused by emetic drugs in laboratory rats with kaolin, gypsum, and lime as test substances

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 261, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2023.114076

Keywords

Pica; Nausea; Kaolin; Gypsum; Lime; Lithium chloride; Cisplatin; rats

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Pica is the consumption of nonfood substances and often used as a marker for nausea in laboratory rats. Previous studies have used kaolin clay pellets, but this study explored alternative substances. The results showed that gypsum could be used as an indicator of nausea, but its sensitivity was not as good as kaolin. Lime was not a suitable marker. In conclusion, the superiority of kaolin as a test substance for nausea was not overturned, but the main component of kaolin, aluminosilicate, may not be the critical determinant of emetic-caused pica in rats.
Pica refers to eating nonfood substances. The pica behavior has been the focus of attention in physiological and pharmacological studies, because its consumption is a good marker of nausea in laboratory rats, which cannot vomit due to neuroanatomical reasons. Almost all pica studies with rats have used kaolin clay pellets as nonfood substances. The present study primarily aimed to explore an alternative (or more suitable) substance to kaolin for detection of nausea induced by emetic drugs. Two calcium compounds, gypsum and lime, were evaluated in this study. An injection of lithium chloride (LiCl) increased pica behavior not only in the rats given kaolin but also in the rats given gypsum, suggesting that gypsum consumption could be used as an indicator of nausea. However, its sensitivity was no greater than that of kaolin consumption. In addition, lime is not a useful marker for nausea because the size of pica was small in the LiCl-injected rats, and did not differ from the control in the cisplatininjected rats. In short, the superiority of kaolin as a test substance for nausea could not be overturned. However, the fact that nauseous rats displayed pica behavior with gypsum and lime refutes the claim that aluminosilicate, the main component of kaolin, is the critical determinant of emetic-caused pica in laboratory rats.

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