4.3 Article

Ejaculation latency determines susceptibility to stress in the male rat

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BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES
卷 205, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2023.104819

关键词

Stress; Sexual motivation; Sexual execution; Electric foot shocks; Stress susceptibility

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Stress has varying effects on sexual behavior, including enhancing execution or completely eliminating sexual interaction. This study investigates the relationship between sexual execution and susceptibility to stress. The results show that rats more susceptible to stress have longer ejaculation latency, even before stress is applied.
Stress induces diverse effects on sexual behavior, ranging from enhanced execution to the complete abolishment of sexual interaction. However, it is not clear whether some characteristics intrinsic to the individual that ex-periences stress could also explain this differential effect. This study seeks to relate sexual execution to sus-ceptibility to stress (as post-stress sexual motivation). To this end, we designed a three-session experimental paradigm. In the first session, male rats were allowed to copulate with a female. In the second, the male rats received electric foot shocks as they attempted to approach the female. The third and final session was used to determine the effects of stress on sexual behavior by separating the rats into two groups: a motivation-impaired group (rats that did not cross to achieve copulation), and an unimpaired group (rats that did cross). Mount la-tency was affected immediately by stress in both groups, though only the non-crossing group presented a reduced number of copulatory events. The rats that did not cross showed slower-paced sexual execution even before stress was applied compared to the rats that crossed. These results show that rats that are more susceptible to stress present higher ejaculation latency even before the application of stress.

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