Rationale: Zolpidem is a hypnotic drug that binds to γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptors but lacks consistently demonstrable anxiolytic efficacy.
Methods: Rhesus monkeys (N = 4) were trained under a multiple schedule in which food-maintained responding was programmed (18-response fixed ratio) for a 5-min period, followed by a 5-min period in which the food-maintained responding was suppressed by response-contingent electric shock (20-response fixed ratio). Doses of zolpidem (range = 0.03 to 1.0 mg/kg, i.v.) were administered 5 min before the session, and responding was re-assessed at three additional 20-min intervals. A similar experiment also was carried out with the non-selective benzodiazepine, triazolam, over a dose range of 0.001 to 0.1 mg/kg, i.v.
Results: Zolpidem did not engender a significant increase in average rates of suppressed responding at earlier time points; however, rates of non-suppressed responding were robustly decreased. At 45- and 65-min post-injection, zolpidem treatment resulted in a dose-dependent increase in rates of suppressed responding. In contrast, the non-selective benzodiazepine triazolam increased rates of suppressed responding in a dose-dependent manner at all four time points, although decreases in non-suppressed responding were less at the later time points.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that zolpidem has anxiolytic-like effects, but only >25 min after i.v. injection in this rhesus monkey conflict model. It was hypothesized that time-dependent effects on the response rate-suppressing properties of zolpidem become tolerant (i.e., acute tolerance). Because anxiolytic-like effects remain stable throughout the session, the absence of rate-decreasing effects may "unmask" anti-conflict effects.