| Literature DB >> 34696877 |
Donita L Robinson1, Leslie R Amodeo2, L Judson Chandler3, Fulton T Crews4, Cindy L Ehlers5, Alexander Gómez-A4, Kati L Healey6, Cynthia M Kuhn7, Victoria A Macht4, S Alexander Marshall8, H Scott Swartzwelder6, Elena I Varlinskaya9, David F Werner9.
Abstract
Alcohol drinking is often initiated during adolescence, and this frequently escalates to binge drinking. As adolescence is also a period of dynamic neurodevelopment, preclinical evidence has highlighted that some of the consequences of binge drinking can be long lasting with deficits persisting into adulthood in a variety of cognitive-behavioral tasks. However, while the majority of preclinical work to date has been performed in male rodents, the rapid increase in binge drinking in adolescent female humans has re-emphasized the importance of addressing alcohol effects in the context of sex as a biological variable. Here we review several of the consequences of adolescent ethanol exposure in light of sex as a critical biological variable. While some alcohol-induced outcomes, such as non-social approach/avoidance behavior and sleep disruption, are generally consistent across sex, others are variable across sex, such as alcohol drinking, sensitivity to ethanol, social anxiety-like behavior, and induction of proinflammatory markers.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Alcohol; Behavior; Dopamine; Epigenetics; Neuroimmune; Neurophysiology; Sex
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34696877 PMCID: PMC8672816 DOI: 10.1016/bs.irn.2021.07.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Rev Neurobiol ISSN: 0074-7742 Impact factor: 4.280