Spear Norman E, Molina Juan C
Department of Psychology, Center for Developmental Psychobiology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2005 Jun;29(6):909-29. doi: 10.1097/01.alc.0000171046.78556.66.
Despite good evidence that ethanol abuse in adulthood is more likely the earlier human adolescents begin drinking, it is unclear why the early onset of drinking occurs in the first place. A review of experimental studies with animals complemented by clinical, epidemiologic and experimental studies with humans supports the idea that precipitating conditions for ethanol abuse occur well before adolescence, in terms of very early exposure to ethanol as a fetus or infant. Experimental studies with animals indicate, accordingly, that ethanol intake during adolescence or adulthood is potentiated by much earlier exposure to ethanol as a fetus or infant.
Two broad theoretical frameworks are suggested to explain the increase in affinity for ethanol that follows very early exposure to ethanol, one based on effects of mere exposure and the other on associative conditioning. Studied for 50 years or more in several areas of psychology, "effects of mere exposure" refers to enhanced preference expressed for flavors, or just about any stimuli, that are relatively familiar. An alternative framework, in terms of associative conditioning, is guided by this working hypothesis: During ethanol exposure the fetus or infant acquires an association between ethanol's orosensory (odor/taste) and pharmacological consequences, causing the animal subsequently to seek out ethanol's odor and taste.
The implication that ethanol has rewarding consequences for the fetus or young infant is supported by recent evidence with perinatal rats. Paradoxically, several studies have shown that such early exposure to ethanol may in some circumstances make the infant treat ethanol-related events as aversive, and yet enhanced intake of ethanol in adolescence is nevertheless a consequence. Alternative interpretations of this paradox are considered among the varied circumstances of early ethanol exposure that lead subsequently to increased affinity for ethanol.
尽管有充分证据表明,人类青少年饮酒开始得越早,成年后患酒精滥用问题的可能性就越大,但饮酒为何会过早开始尚不清楚。一项对动物实验研究的综述,辅以对人类的临床、流行病学和实验研究,支持了这样一种观点,即酒精滥用的诱发条件早在青春期之前就已出现,具体表现为胎儿或婴儿期就很早接触酒精。相应地,动物实验研究表明,胎儿或婴儿期更早接触酒精会增强青春期或成年期的酒精摄入量。
提出了两个宽泛的理论框架来解释早期接触酒精后对酒精亲和力的增加,一个基于单纯接触效应,另一个基于联想性条件作用。“单纯接触效应”在心理学的几个领域已经研究了五十多年,它指的是对相对熟悉的味道或几乎任何刺激表现出的偏好增强。另一个基于联想性条件作用的框架,受此工作假设的指导:在胎儿或婴儿接触酒精期间,他们会在酒精的口部感官(气味/味道)和药理作用之间建立联系,导致动物随后去寻找酒精的气味和味道。
围产期大鼠的最新证据支持了酒精对胎儿或幼儿有奖励作用的观点。矛盾的是,几项研究表明,这种早期接触酒精在某些情况下可能会使婴儿将与酒精相关的事件视为厌恶的,但青春期酒精摄入量的增加仍然是一个结果。在早期接触酒精导致随后对酒精亲和力增加的各种情况下,对这一矛盾现象进行了不同的解释。