4.6 Article

N-acetylcysteine improves impulse control and attenuates relapse-like alcohol intake in long-term drinking rats

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 436, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2022.114089

Keywords

Alcohol use disorder; Alcoholism; N acetyl cysteine; NAC; Binge drinking; Impulsivity

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The study found that N-acetylcysteine (NAC) can reduce relapse-like drinking and improve impulse control in long-term alcohol drinking rats, but has no effect on levels of alcohol drinking or motivation to drink alcohol. These findings support the use of NAC as an adjuvant treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD) and warrant further investigation in substance use settings.
Increasing evidence suggests that individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) present with a disrupted glutamatergic system that underlies core components of addictive disorders, including drug relapse and low impulse control. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a cystine prodrug that has been found to promote glutamate homeostasis and drug abstinence. However, no studies to date have evaluated NAC's effect on impulsivity in substance use disorders. Here we determined whether NAC would decrease alcohol-intake behaviors, in addition to improving impulse control, in long-term alcohol drinking male Wistar-Han rats. Before the start of the experiments, all rats were exposed to long-term intermittent access to 20% ethanol for at least seven weeks. Next, in different groups of rats, the effect of NAC (60 and/or 90 mg/kg) was evaluated on (i) voluntary alcohol drinking using a twobottle free choice paradigm, (ii) the motivation to self-administer alcohol under a progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement, and (iii) relapse-like drinking using the alcohol deprivation effect model. Finally, (iv) NAC's effect on impulse control was evaluated using the five-choice serial reaction time task. Results showed that NAC administration at 90 mg/kg significantly reduced relapse-like drinking and improved impulse control. In contrast, NAC had no effect on levels of alcohol drinking or motivation to drink alcohol. In conclusion, our findings continue to support the use of NAC as an adjuvant treatment for the maintenance of abstinence in AUD. Moreover, we provide evidence for NAC's efficacy in improving impulse control following drinking, which warrants further investigation in substance use settings.

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