4.2 Article

Dependence-induced alcohol drinking by alcohol-preferring (P) rats and outbred Wistar rats

Journal

ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 32, Issue 9, Pages 1688-1696

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2008.00678.x

Keywords

dependence; P rats; alcohol vapor; withdrawal; abstinence

Funding

  1. Pearson Center for Alcoholism and Addiction Research
  2. NIAAA [AA06420, AA08459, AA015512, AA007611-20]

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Background: Chronic intermittent alcohol vapor exposure and selective breeding procedures have been used separately for many years to model specific aspects of alcohol dependence. The purpose of the present investigation was to combine these 2 approaches by exposing alcohol-preferring (P) rats to chronic intermittent alcohol vapor for extended periods of time and then testing them for operant alcohol responding in parallel with a group of outbred Wistar rats at multiple time points following the termination of vapor exposure. Methods: P rats (n = 20) and Wistar rats (n = 18) were trained to respond for 10% (w/v) ethanol in an operant situation, then divided into groups matched for intake levels. Animals were then exposed to chronic intermittent alcohol vapor (14 hours ON/10 hours OFF) or air for 8 weeks. Rats were then tested for operant alcohol responding under various conditions and at multiple time points during alcohol withdrawal (6 hours) and protracted abstinence (1 to 15 days). Results: Chronic alcohol vapor exposure produced similar increases in operant alcohol responding in P rats and Wistar rats during acute withdrawal and protracted abstinence. Conclusions: These results illustrate the separate and combined effects of genetic selection for high alcohol preference and dependence on alcohol drinking behavior. Furthermore, these results confirm past findings that dependent rats consume more alcohol than nondependent controls well into abstinence following extended periods of alcohol vapor exposure.

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