Literature DB >> 11435026

Effects of lifelong ethanol consumption on drinking behavior and motor impairment of alcohol-preferring AA and alcohol-avoiding ANA rats.

M Sarviharju1, P Jaatinen, P Hyytiä, A Hervonen, K Kiianmaa.   

Abstract

The effects of drinking ethanol throughout a lifetime on voluntary drinking behavior and ethanol-induced motor impairment were studied in alcohol-preferring AA (Alko, Alcohol) and alcohol-avoiding ANA (Alko, Non-Alcohol) rats of both sexes. At the age 3 months, the rats were tested for individual voluntary ethanol (10% vol./vol.) intake and ethanol-induced motor impairment (2 g/kg, i.p.). The rats were housed in group cages, half of them having 12% (vol./vol.) ethanol as the only source of fluid and the other half having free access to water. Food was always available for all animals. At the age of 23 months, their individual voluntary ethanol intake and ethanol-induced motor impairment were tested again. During forced drinking, the females of both strains consumed more ethanol than did the males. The ethanol consumption of the AA and ANA females and the ANA males increased significantly (P < .001) with age, but a slight decrease was seen in the ethanol consumption of the AA males. Time x strain interaction showed a significant (P < .05) difference in the ethanol consumption of male rats, with the AA males having a slight decrease in ethanol consumption with age, whereas the ANA males increased their ethanol consumption. After 19 months of forced ethanol exposure, AA males significantly decreased their individual voluntary ethanol consumption, and individual voluntary ethanol consumption by ethanol-exposed AA males was more pronounced (P < .001) than that of the AA rats that had free access to water (P < .05). For the female AA rats, those having free access to water significantly decreased their voluntary ethanol consumption (P < .05), but those having ethanol only did not. No significant changes in voluntary ethanol consumption with age or with different exposures were seen in the ANA rats. Body weights were higher in the groups having access to water than in the ethanol-only groups, but the differences were not significant within the AA and ANA strains. The ANA rats were significantly heavier in all groups. These results indicate that the voluntarily nondrinking ANA rats can drink almost as much ethanol as the voluntarily drinking AA rats when they are forced to drink ethanol and that lifelong forced ethanol drinking does not change their inherent drinking habits. When sensitivity to ethanol was measured with the tilting-plane test, the old AA female rats were more sensitive to ethanol than were the young ones. The young ANA females were more sensitive than the AA females when tested at 4 months. In males, aging did not produce any differences in ethanol sensitivity.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11435026     DOI: 10.1016/s0741-8329(01)00132-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol        ISSN: 0741-8329            Impact factor:   2.405


  5 in total

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3.  Effects of adolescent onset voluntary drinking followed by ethanol vapor exposure on subsequent ethanol consumption during protracted withdrawal in adult Wistar rats.

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4.  Long-term alcohol drinking in High Drinking in the Dark mice is stable for many months and does not show alcohol deprivation effects.

Authors:  John C Crabbe; Wyatt R Hack; Angela R Ozburn; Antonia M Savarese; Pamela Metten
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5.  Effects of Lifelong Ethanol Consumption on Brain Monoamine Transmitters in Alcohol-Preferring Alko Alcohol (AA) Rats.

Authors:  Pia Jaatinen; Maija Sarviharju; Noora Raivio; C J Peter Eriksson; Antti Hervonen; Kalervo Kiianmaa
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2013-05-15
  5 in total

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