Alcohol solution strength preference predicts compulsive-like drinking behavior in rats

被引:11
作者
Foo, Jerome C. [1 ]
Meinhardt, Marcus W. [2 ,3 ]
Skorodumov, Ivan [2 ]
Spanagel, Rainer [2 ]
机构
[1] Heidelberg Univ, Cent Inst Mental Hlth, Dept Genet Epidemiol Psychiat, Med Fac Mannheim, J5, Mannheim, Germany
[2] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Psychopharmacol, Cent Inst Mental Hlth, Med Fac Mannheim, J5, Mannheim, Germany
[3] Heidelberg Univ, Cent Inst Mental Hlth, Dept Mol Neuroimaging, Med Fac Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany
来源
ALCOHOL-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH | 2022年 / 46卷 / 09期
关键词
addiction; alcohol deprivation effect; compulsive drinking; quinine; relapse; ANIMAL-MODELS; ADDICTION; SYSTEM; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1111/acer.14910
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Understanding compulsive drinking behavior is key to improving outcomes in the treatment of addiction. In the present study, we investigated compulsive-like drinking in alcohol-addicted rats using the alcohol deprivation effect (ADE) model of relapse behavior, which involves repeated deprivation and reintroduction phases; the latter approximate relapse. Methods High-resolution longitudinal drinking and locomotor data were measured while rats (n = 30) underwent a four-bottle (water, 5%, 10%, 20% alcohol v/v) free-choice ADE paradigm. Alcohol bottles were adulterated with the bitter compound quinine during a reintroduction phase to test for compulsive behavior. We characterized how drinking and locomotor behavior during ADE + quinine differed from a regular ADE and how, at the individual level, behavioral parameters extracted from the regular ADE related to compulsive-like drinking. Associations of drinking with locomotor activity were also examined. Results In the ADE with quinine, we observed reduced consumption of alcohol and a shift to preference for stronger alcohol. Quinine acted by decreasing both the access size and frequency of drinking of 5% alcohol while increasing the frequency of consumption of 20% alcohol. Preference for higher alcohol concentrations prior to the quinine challenge was associated with greater compulsive-like drinking behavior; higher baseline consumption of 20% alcohol correlated with more drinking of quinine-adulterated solutions while high frequency and amount of 5% alcohol consumption at baseline were correlated with being more strongly affected by quinine. Associations between locomotor activity and drinking behavior were observed at the hourly level. These associations reflected changing preferences across experimental phases. Conclusion Drinking patterns, and specifically solution preference, may offer insights into the presentation of compulsive-like drinking. The findings provide a preclinical basis for observations from epidemiological studies that link higher risk and burden of alcohol-related disease to stronger alcohol concentrations and encourage further translational studies to better understand the underlying mechanisms.
引用
收藏
页码:1710 / 1719
页数:10
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