Damaggio Amanda S, Gorman Michael R
Center for Chronobiology and Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014 Mar;38(3):879-88. doi: 10.1111/acer.12297. Epub 2013 Nov 20.
Physiological responses to acute ethanol (EtOH) injection depend critically on the timing of their administration. Whether daily timing modulates effects of longer intoxication intervals characteristic of alcohol-dependent humans remains unknown. The present work examines time-of-day effects during EtOH exposure and withdrawal measured by locomotor activity (ActLoc ) and body temperature (Tb ) across multiple rounds of EtOH exposure/withdrawal.
Two groups of C57BL/6J mice (n = 8 per group), implanted with radio-telemeters, were entrained to opposite light-dark periods (14:10 LD cycle) so that their rest/activity cycles were 12 hours apart. Under a 2-hour skeleton photoperiod animals were simultaneously exposed to 3 daily cycles of EtOH vapor inhalation (14 hours EtOH on) and withdrawal (10 hours EtOH off). During this time, air-only control groups (n = 4 per group) matched for entrainment were handled in a comparable manner. After the third cycle of EtOH vapor, the animals were left undisturbed for 11 days to recover. The 14-day protocol was repeated 3 additional times.
During intoxication, mice exposed to EtOH in the subjective night exhibited greater hypothermia and more overall disruptions in the Tb and ActLoc rhythms. Acute withdrawal induced hypothermia during the subjective night and hyperthermia during the subjective day. Animals in both phases demonstrated significant disruptions in ActLoc during withdrawal. ActLoc had little effect on Tb during EtOH exposure, but it significantly influenced Tb during acute withdrawal.
The physiological responses of both EtOH exposure and withdrawal differ as a function of time of day. These findings suggest that controlling for the circadian phase of exposure and/or withdrawal may mitigate the severity of symptomatic withdrawal.
对急性乙醇(EtOH)注射的生理反应严重依赖于给药时间。每日时间是否会调节酒精依赖人群较长中毒间隔的影响尚不清楚。本研究通过多轮乙醇暴露/戒断过程中的运动活动(ActLoc)和体温(Tb)测量,研究了乙醇暴露和戒断期间的昼夜时间效应。
两组C57BL/6J小鼠(每组n = 8只),植入无线电遥测仪,使其适应相反的明暗周期(14:10 LD周期),以便它们的休息/活动周期相隔12小时。在2小时的骨架光周期下,动物同时暴露于每日3个周期的乙醇蒸汽吸入(乙醇开启14小时)和戒断(乙醇关闭10小时)。在此期间,对匹配的仅空气对照组(每组n = 4只)进行类似处理。在第三个乙醇蒸汽周期后,让动物不受干扰地恢复11天。14天的方案再重复3次。
在中毒期间,在主观夜间暴露于乙醇的小鼠表现出更大程度的体温过低,以及Tb和ActLoc节律更全面的紊乱。急性戒断在主观夜间诱发体温过低,在主观白天诱发体温过高。两个阶段的动物在戒断期间ActLoc均表现出明显紊乱。在乙醇暴露期间,ActLoc对Tb影响不大,但在急性戒断期间对Tb有显著影响。
乙醇暴露和戒断的生理反应均因昼夜时间而异。这些发现表明,控制暴露和/或戒断的昼夜阶段可能会减轻症状性戒断的严重程度。