4.1 Article

Development of anxiety-like behaviors during adolescence: Persistent effects of adolescent morphine exposure in male rats

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dev.22315

Keywords

adolescence; anxiety; morphine; emotional behaviors; development

Funding

  1. Iran National Science Foundation (INSF), Faculty of Medical Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University (Tehran, Iran)
  2. Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences (Kermanshah, Iran)

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Epidemiological studies have shown that the use, misuse, and abuse of opioid drugs among adolescents is a prevalent issue globally, with significant social and economic consequences. This study investigates the long-term effects of sustained opioid exposure during adolescence on anxiety-like behaviors. The results indicate that chronic adolescent morphine exposure can lead to reduced weight gain during the period of exposure and persisting anxiety-like behaviors during the transition from adolescence to adulthood.
Epidemiological studies show the prevalence of opioid use, misuse and abuse in adolescents, which imposes social and economic accountability worldwide. Chronic opioid exposure, especially in adolescents, may have lasting effects on emotional behaviors that persist into adulthood. The current experiments were therefore designed to study the effects of sustained opioid exposure during adolescence on anxiety-like behaviors. Adolescent male Wistar rats underwent increasing doses of morphine for 10 days (PNDs 31-40). After that the open field test (OFT) and elevated plus maze (EPM) test were performed over a 4-week postmorphine treatment from adolescence to adulthood. Moreover, the weight of the animals was measured at these time points. We found that chronic adolescent morphine exposure reduces the weight gain during the period of morphine treatment and 4 weeks after that. It had no significant effect on the locomotor activity in the animals. Moreover, anxiolytic-like behavior was observed in the rats exposed to morphine during adolescence evaluated by OFT and EPM test. Thus, long-term exposure to morphine during adolescence has the profound potential of altering the anxiety-like behavior profile in the period from adolescence to adulthood. The maturation of the nervous system can be affected by drug abuse during the developmental window of adolescence and these effects may lead to behaviorally stable alterations.

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