Literature DB >> 18936917

Offspring of parents with an alcohol use disorder prefer higher levels of brain alcohol exposure in experiments involving computer-assisted self-infusion of ethanol (CASE).

Ulrich S Zimmermann1, Inge Mick, Manfred Laucht, Victor Vitvitskiy, Martin H Plawecki, Karl F Mann, Sean O'Connor.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Acute alcohol effects may differ in social drinkers with a positive family history of alcohol use disorders (FHP) compared to FH negative (FHN) controls.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether FHP subjects prefer higher levels of brain alcohol exposure than do FHN controls.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-two young healthy nondependent social drinkers participated in two identical sessions of computer-assisted self-infusion of ethanol (CASE); the first for practicing the procedures, the second to test hypotheses. All 12 FHP (four women) and ten FHN (three women) participants received a priming exposure, increasing arterial blood alcohol concentration (aBAC) to 30 mg% at 10 min and decreasing it to 15 mg% at 25 min. A 2-h self-administration period followed, during which only the subjects could increase their aBAC by pressing a button connected to a computer controlling the infusion pump. Infusion rate profiles were calculated instantaneously to increase aBAC by precisely 7.5 mg% within 2.5 min after each button press, followed by a steady descent. Subjects were instructed to produce the same alcohol effects as they would do at a weekend party.
RESULTS: The mean and maximum aBAC during the self-administration period and the number of alcohol requests (NOAR) were significantly higher in the FHP vs. FHN participants.
CONCLUSIONS: This is the first laboratory experiment demonstrating higher alcohol self-administration in FHP compared to FHN subjects. A practice session increases the sensitivity of CASE experiments for detection of subtle differences in human alcohol self-administration.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18936917     DOI: 10.1007/s00213-008-1349-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


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9.  Development and pilot validation of computer-assisted self-infusion of ethanol (CASE): a new method to study alcohol self-administration in humans.

Authors:  Ulrich S Zimmermann; Inge Mick; Victor Vitvitskyi; Martin H Plawecki; Karl F Mann; Sean O'Connor
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7.  Adolescent Women Induce Lower Blood Alcohol Levels Than Men in a Laboratory Alcohol Self-Administration Experiment.

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Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2014-07-18       Impact factor: 7.853

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