Molina Juan Carlos, Pautassi Ricardo Marcos, Truxell Eric, Spear Norman
Center for Developmental Psychobiology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA.
Alcohol. 2007 Feb;41(1):41-55. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2007.01.005.
While appetitive reinforcement effects of ethanol are easily detected in rat neonates, such phenomena rarely have been observed in older infants. Recently, Molina et al. [Molina, J. C., Ponce L. F., Truxell, E., & Spear N. E. (2006). Infantile sensitivity to ethanol's motivational effects: ethanol reinforcement during the third postnatal week. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 30, 1506-1519] reported such effects of ethanol in 14-day-olds using a second-order conditioning procedure. Infants also appear to be sensitive to biphasic reinforcement or general motivational effects of ethanol, with appetitive effects seeming to occur early in the state of intoxication and aversive effects predominant during late stages, but tests have been inconclusive. The present study examined the possibility of biphasic motivational effects of ethanol during infancy through the use of second-order conditioning procedures. Preweanling rats (14 days old) experienced intraoral water infusions (conditioned stimulus, CS) either 5-20 or 30-45 min after administration of 0.5 or 2.0 g/kg i.g. ethanol. Pups were then exposed to the CS while over a novel texture (second-order phase). Tests of tactile preference for that texture followed. Locomotive, thermal, hormonal (corticosterone release), and pharmacokinetic patterns likely to underlie the acquisition of ethanol-mediated conditioning were also examined in subsequent experiments. Intraoral CSs paired with either early or late effects of low-dose ethanol (0.5 g/kg, blood ethanol concentration: 40 mg%) became positive second-order reinforcers. Appetitive effects were also exhibited by pups exposed to the CS during commencement of the toxic episode induced by a 2.0 g/kg ethanol dose, 5-20 min after administration of ethanol, whereas aversions emerged when CS presentation occurred 30-45 min postadministration time (blood ethanol concentrations: 157 and 200 mg%, respectively). Overall, the results indicate that infants rapidly detect differential motivational properties of ethanol as a function of dose or drug postadministration time. Relatively neutral stimuli associated with these properties are later capable of acting as either positive or aversive reinforcers. Thermal and motor responses that accompany ethanol intoxication do not seem to be directly associated with differential hedonic properties of the drug at this stage of development.
虽然在新生大鼠中很容易检测到乙醇的奖赏强化效应,但在年龄稍大的婴儿中很少观察到这种现象。最近,莫利纳等人[莫利纳,J.C.,庞塞L.F.,特鲁塞尔,E.,& 斯皮尔N.E.(2006年)。婴儿对乙醇动机效应的敏感性:出生后第三周的乙醇强化。《酒精临床与实验研究》30,1506 - 1519]使用二阶条件反射程序报告了14天大婴儿中乙醇的这种效应。婴儿似乎也对乙醇的双相强化或一般动机效应敏感,奖赏效应似乎在中毒状态早期出现,而厌恶效应在后期占主导,但测试结果尚无定论。本研究通过使用二阶条件反射程序研究了婴儿期乙醇双相动机效应的可能性。断奶前大鼠(14天大)在腹腔注射0.5或2.0 g/kg乙醇后5 - 20分钟或30 - 45分钟接受口腔内水输注(条件刺激,CS)。然后让幼崽在一种新质地(二阶阶段)上接触CS。随后进行对该质地的触觉偏好测试。在后续实验中还研究了可能是乙醇介导的条件反射习得基础的运动、热、激素(皮质酮释放)和药代动力学模式。与低剂量乙醇(0.5 g/kg,血液乙醇浓度:40 mg%)的早期或晚期效应配对的口腔内CS成为阳性二阶强化物。在2.0 g/kg乙醇剂量诱导的中毒发作开始时,即乙醇给药后5 - 20分钟,接触CS的幼崽也表现出奖赏效应,而当CS在给药后30 - 45分钟呈现时出现厌恶效应(血液乙醇浓度分别为157和200 mg%)。总体而言,结果表明婴儿能迅速检测到乙醇根据剂量或给药后时间的不同动机特性。与这些特性相关的相对中性刺激后来能够充当阳性或厌恶强化物。在这个发育阶段,乙醇中毒伴随的热和运动反应似乎与该药物不同的享乐特性没有直接关联。