4.5 Article

Female rats exposed to stress and alcohol show impaired memory and increased depressive-like behaviors

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 123, Issue -, Pages 47-54

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2013.09.009

Keywords

Female; Stress; Alcohol; Memory; Anxiety; Depression

Funding

  1. NIH MBRS-RISE [GM060665]
  2. RCMI from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) [RR03037]
  3. NIH [AA019413]
  4. Department of Defense [W81XWH-08-1-0243]

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Exposure to daily life stressors is associated with increases in anxiety, depression, and overall negative affect. Alcohol or other psychoactive drugs are often used to alleviate stress effects. While females are more than twice as likely to develop mood disorders and are more susceptible to dependency than males, they are infrequently examined. In this study, female rats received no stress/no alcohol control (CON), alcohol alone (ALC), stress alone (STR), or stress plus alcohol (STR + ALC). Stress consisted of restraint for 6 h/day/7 days, and alcohol was administered immediately following restraint via gastric gavage at a dose of 2.0 g/kg. Dependent measures included tests utilizing object recognition (OR), Y-maze, elevated plus maze (EPM), forced swim (FST), blood alcohol content, corticosterone levels, and body weights. ALC, STR + ALC, but not stress alone, impaired memory on OR. All treatments impaired spatial memory on the Y-maze. Anxiety was not affected on the EPM, but rats treated with alcohol or in combination with stress showed increased immobility on the FST, suggestive of alcohol-induced depression. Previously, we found alcohol reversed deleterious effects of stress on memory and mood in males, but current results show that females reacted negatively when the two treatments were combined. Thus, responses to alcohol, stress and their combination suggest that sex specific treatments are needed for stress-induced behavioral changes and that self-medicating with alcohol to cope with stress maybe deleterious in females. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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