Chester Julia A, Blose Annette M, Zweifel Mark, Froehlich Janice C
Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2004 Mar;28(3):385-93. doi: 10.1097/01.alc.0000117830.54371.7a.
Stress has long been thought to influence the initiation and maintenance of alcohol drinking in humans. However, results of studies in animals suggest that the relationship between stress and alcohol drinking is not well understood. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of unpredictable and uncontrollable restraint stress on alcohol consumption in two sets of rat lines selectively bred for alcohol preference (P) and high alcohol drinking (HAD1) and for alcohol nonpreference (NP) and low alcohol drinking (LAD1).
Male P (n = 26) and NP (n = 26) and HAD1 (n = 17) and LAD1 (n = 20) rats were counterbalanced on the basis of alcohol intake and assigned, in matched pairs, to either a stress (Stress) or a no-stress (Control) group. All rats were given a free choice between a 10% v/v alcohol solution and water, with food freely available. Unpredictable, uncontrollable stress, which consisted of immobilization in a nylon restraint sleeve for 30 to 120 min/day, was applied for 10 consecutive days.
Stress moderately reduced alcohol intake in both P and HAD1 rats versus controls and had no effect on alcohol intake in either the NP or the LAD1 rats during the 10 days of stress application. Alcohol intake was increased for the first 5 days after stress termination in P rats but not in HAD1 rats. Alcohol intake remained stable for several weeks in both the NP and LAD1 lines after stress termination and then increased during the last 15 days of the 35-day poststress period in NP rats, but not in LAD1 rats.
A reduction in alcohol intake during stress in rats with a genetic predisposition toward high alcohol intake seems to be a moderate but consistent finding, whereas an increase in alcohol intake after stress termination is less consistent and may be influenced by genetic background.
长期以来,人们一直认为压力会影响人类饮酒行为的起始和维持。然而,动物研究结果表明,压力与饮酒之间的关系尚未得到充分理解。本研究的目的是检验不可预测且无法控制的束缚应激对两组选择性培育的大鼠品系酒精摄入量的影响,这两组品系分别为酒精偏好(P)和高酒精摄入量(HAD1)以及酒精无偏好(NP)和低酒精摄入量(LAD1)。
雄性P品系(n = 26)、NP品系(n = 26)、HAD1品系(n = 17)和LAD1品系(n = 20)的大鼠根据酒精摄入量进行平衡,并以配对方式分配到应激(应激组)或无应激(对照组)组。所有大鼠可在10% v/v酒精溶液和水之间自由选择,食物可自由获取。不可预测、无法控制的应激包括每天在尼龙束缚套内固定30至120分钟,持续施加10天。
在施加应激的10天内,与对照组相比,应激适度降低了P品系和HAD1品系大鼠的酒精摄入量,而对应激组NP品系或LAD1品系大鼠的酒精摄入量没有影响。应激终止后的前5天,P品系大鼠的酒精摄入量增加,但HAD1品系大鼠没有。应激终止后,NP品系和LAD1品系大鼠的酒精摄入量在数周内保持稳定,然后在应激后35天的最后15天,NP品系大鼠的酒精摄入量增加,但LAD1品系大鼠没有。
对于有高酒精摄入遗传倾向的大鼠,应激期间酒精摄入量的减少似乎是一个适度但一致的发现,而应激终止后酒精摄入量的增加则不太一致,可能受遗传背景影响。