Cunningham C L, Niehus J S, Bachtold J F
Department of Medical Psychology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201-3098.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 1992 Dec;16(6):1117-24. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.1992.tb00707.x.
Six experiments examined the effects of low (5-10 degrees C), normal (21 degrees C), or high (32 degrees) ambient temperature on conditioned taste aversion and body temperature changes produced by ethanol, lithium chloride, or morphine sulfate. Fluid-deprived rats received five to seven taste conditioning trials at 48-hr intervals. On each trial, access to saccharin at normal ambient temperature was followed by injection of drug or saline and placement for 6 hr into a temperature-controlled enclosure. Exposure to low ambient temperature facilitated, whereas exposure to high ambient temperature retarded acquisition of ethanol-induced conditioned taste aversion. The ability of an alteration in ambient temperature to influence conditioned taste aversion varied as a function of ethanol dose and was related to ambient temperature's effect on ethanol-induced hypothermia. More specifically, strength of conditioned taste aversion was negatively correlated with core body temperature after ethanol injection. Alterations in ambient temperature alone did not affect ingestion of a paired flavor solution in the absence of drug. Moreover, alterations in ambient temperature did not appear to influence conditioned taste aversion by changing ethanol pharmacokinetics. Finally, high and low ambient temperature did not affect development of taste aversion conditioned by lithium chloride or morphine sulfate. The overall pattern of data presented by these experiments supports the hypothesis that ambient-temperature influences strength of ethanol-induced conditioned taste aversion by altering the hypothermic response to ethanol. More generally, these data support the suggestion that body temperature change induced by ethanol is related to ethanol's aversive motivational effects and may be involved in modulating ethanol intake.
六项实验研究了低(5 - 10摄氏度)、正常(21摄氏度)或高(32摄氏度)环境温度对由乙醇、氯化锂或硫酸吗啡引起的条件性味觉厌恶和体温变化的影响。禁水的大鼠每隔48小时接受五到七次味觉条件反射试验。每次试验中,在正常环境温度下给予大鼠糖精后,注射药物或生理盐水,然后将其置于温度可控的环境中6小时。暴露于低环境温度下会促进乙醇诱导的条件性味觉厌恶的习得,而暴露于高环境温度下则会延迟这种习得。环境温度的改变对条件性味觉厌恶的影响能力随乙醇剂量而变化,并且与环境温度对乙醇诱导的体温过低的影响有关。更具体地说,条件性味觉厌恶的强度与注射乙醇后的核心体温呈负相关。仅环境温度的改变在无药物的情况下不影响配对风味溶液的摄取。此外,环境温度的改变似乎不会通过改变乙醇的药代动力学来影响条件性味觉厌恶。最后,高和低环境温度不影响由氯化锂或硫酸吗啡引起的味觉厌恶的形成。这些实验呈现的数据总体模式支持这样的假设,即环境温度通过改变对乙醇的体温过低反应来影响乙醇诱导的条件性味觉厌恶的强度。更一般地说这些数据支持这样的观点,即乙醇引起的体温变化与乙醇的厌恶动机效应有关,并且可能参与调节乙醇摄入量。