Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol

Ethanol abuse is linked to several acute and chronic injuries that can lead to health problems. Ethanol addiction is one of the most severe diseases linked to the abuse of this drug. Symptoms of ethanol addiction include compulsive substance intake and withdrawal syndrome. Stress exposure has an important role in addictive behavior for many drugs of abuse (including ethanol), but the consequences of stress and ethanol in the organism when these factors are concomitant results in a complex interaction. We investigated the effects of concomitant, chronic administration of ethanol and stress exposure on the withdrawal and consumption of, as well as the preference for, ethanol in mice. Male Swiss mice (30–35 g, 8-10 per group) were exposed to an ethanol liquid diet as the only source of food for 15 days. In the final 5 days, they were exposed to forced swimming stress. Twelve hours after removal of the ethanol liquid diet, animals were evaluated for ethanol withdrawal by measuring anxiety-related behaviors and locomotor activity. Twenty-four hours after evaluation of ethanol withdrawal, they were evaluated for voluntary consumption of ethanol in a “three-bottle choice” paradigm. Mice exposed to chronic consumption of ethanol had decreased locomotor activity during withdrawal. Contrary to our expectations, a concomitant forced swimming stress did not aggravate ethanol withdrawal. Nevertheless, simultaneous ethanol administration and stress exposure increased voluntary consumption of ethanol, mainly solutions containing high concentrations of ethanol. These results showed that stressful situations during ethanol intake may aggravate specific addiction-related behaviors.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Morais-Silva,G., Fernandes-Santos,J., Moreira-Silva,D., Marin,M.T.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica 2016
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2016000100606
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S0100-879X2016000100606
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S0100-879X20160001006062019-03-19Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanolMorais-Silva,G.Fernandes-Santos,J.Moreira-Silva,D.Marin,M.T. Ethanol Addiction Stress Free-bottle choice Withdrawal Ethanol abuse is linked to several acute and chronic injuries that can lead to health problems. Ethanol addiction is one of the most severe diseases linked to the abuse of this drug. Symptoms of ethanol addiction include compulsive substance intake and withdrawal syndrome. Stress exposure has an important role in addictive behavior for many drugs of abuse (including ethanol), but the consequences of stress and ethanol in the organism when these factors are concomitant results in a complex interaction. We investigated the effects of concomitant, chronic administration of ethanol and stress exposure on the withdrawal and consumption of, as well as the preference for, ethanol in mice. Male Swiss mice (30–35 g, 8-10 per group) were exposed to an ethanol liquid diet as the only source of food for 15 days. In the final 5 days, they were exposed to forced swimming stress. Twelve hours after removal of the ethanol liquid diet, animals were evaluated for ethanol withdrawal by measuring anxiety-related behaviors and locomotor activity. Twenty-four hours after evaluation of ethanol withdrawal, they were evaluated for voluntary consumption of ethanol in a “three-bottle choice” paradigm. Mice exposed to chronic consumption of ethanol had decreased locomotor activity during withdrawal. Contrary to our expectations, a concomitant forced swimming stress did not aggravate ethanol withdrawal. Nevertheless, simultaneous ethanol administration and stress exposure increased voluntary consumption of ethanol, mainly solutions containing high concentrations of ethanol. These results showed that stressful situations during ethanol intake may aggravate specific addiction-related behaviors.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAssociação Brasileira de Divulgação CientíficaBrazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research v.49 n.1 20162016-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2016000100606en10.1590/1414-431x20155009
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Morais-Silva,G.
Fernandes-Santos,J.
Moreira-Silva,D.
Marin,M.T.
spellingShingle Morais-Silva,G.
Fernandes-Santos,J.
Moreira-Silva,D.
Marin,M.T.
Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
author_facet Morais-Silva,G.
Fernandes-Santos,J.
Moreira-Silva,D.
Marin,M.T.
author_sort Morais-Silva,G.
title Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
title_short Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
title_full Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
title_fullStr Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
title_full_unstemmed Concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
title_sort concomitant stress potentiates the preference for, and consumption of, ethanol induced by chronic pre-exposure to ethanol
description Ethanol abuse is linked to several acute and chronic injuries that can lead to health problems. Ethanol addiction is one of the most severe diseases linked to the abuse of this drug. Symptoms of ethanol addiction include compulsive substance intake and withdrawal syndrome. Stress exposure has an important role in addictive behavior for many drugs of abuse (including ethanol), but the consequences of stress and ethanol in the organism when these factors are concomitant results in a complex interaction. We investigated the effects of concomitant, chronic administration of ethanol and stress exposure on the withdrawal and consumption of, as well as the preference for, ethanol in mice. Male Swiss mice (30–35 g, 8-10 per group) were exposed to an ethanol liquid diet as the only source of food for 15 days. In the final 5 days, they were exposed to forced swimming stress. Twelve hours after removal of the ethanol liquid diet, animals were evaluated for ethanol withdrawal by measuring anxiety-related behaviors and locomotor activity. Twenty-four hours after evaluation of ethanol withdrawal, they were evaluated for voluntary consumption of ethanol in a “three-bottle choice” paradigm. Mice exposed to chronic consumption of ethanol had decreased locomotor activity during withdrawal. Contrary to our expectations, a concomitant forced swimming stress did not aggravate ethanol withdrawal. Nevertheless, simultaneous ethanol administration and stress exposure increased voluntary consumption of ethanol, mainly solutions containing high concentrations of ethanol. These results showed that stressful situations during ethanol intake may aggravate specific addiction-related behaviors.
publisher Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica
publishDate 2016
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2016000100606
work_keys_str_mv AT moraissilvag concomitantstresspotentiatesthepreferenceforandconsumptionofethanolinducedbychronicpreexposuretoethanol
AT fernandessantosj concomitantstresspotentiatesthepreferenceforandconsumptionofethanolinducedbychronicpreexposuretoethanol
AT moreirasilvad concomitantstresspotentiatesthepreferenceforandconsumptionofethanolinducedbychronicpreexposuretoethanol
AT marinmt concomitantstresspotentiatesthepreferenceforandconsumptionofethanolinducedbychronicpreexposuretoethanol
_version_ 1756391509792391168