Beckwith S Wesley, Czachowski Cristine L
Department of Psychology, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014 Oct;38(10):2607-14. doi: 10.1111/acer.12523. Epub 2014 Oct 21.
Increased levels of delay discounting have been associated with alcoholism and problematic levels of drinking. Attempts to assess the directionality of this relationship by studying individuals with a family history of alcoholism as well as rodent lines selectively bred for high home cage alcohol preference have yielded discordant results. One possible reason for this discordance is that increased levels of delay discounting may only track with specific processes that lead to addiction vulnerability. This study investigated this possibility by assessing 3 strains of rats previously identified to exhibit heritable differences in ethanol (EtOH) seeking and consumption.
In an adjusting amount delay discounting task, alcohol-preferring (P) rats who display high levels of both EtOH seeking and consumption were compared to high alcohol-drinking (HAD2) rats who only exhibit moderate EtOH seeking despite high levels of consumption, and Long Evans (LE) rats who display moderate seeking and consumption. EtOH-seeking and consumption phenotypes were subsequently confirmed in an operant self-administration task with a procedural separation between EtOH seeking and drinking.
P rats discounted delayed rewards to a greater extent than both HAD2s and LE who did not show differences in discounting. Moreover, the EtOH-seeking and drinking phenotypes were replicated with P rats displaying greater EtOH seeking compared to both the HAD2s and LE, and both the HAD2s and P rats consuming more EtOH than LEs.
Only the high-seeking strain, the P rats, exhibited increased levels of delay discounting. This suggests that this measure of behavioral under-control is specifically associated with alcohol-related appetitive, but not consummatory, processes as the moderate seeking/high drinking line did not show increased levels of impulsivity. This finding supports the hypothesis that delay discounting is specifically associated with only certain processes which are sufficient but not necessary to confer addiction vulnerability and therefore also supports increased levels of delay discounting as a predisposing risk factor for alcoholism.
延迟折扣水平的升高与酒精中毒及问题饮酒程度相关。通过研究有酒精中毒家族史的个体以及因偏爱笼内高酒精含量而经选择性培育的啮齿类品系来评估这种关系的方向性,结果并不一致。这种不一致的一个可能原因是,延迟折扣水平的升高可能仅与导致成瘾易感性的特定过程相关。本研究通过评估先前确定在乙醇(EtOH)寻求和消费方面表现出遗传差异的3种品系大鼠来探究这种可能性。
在一个调整量延迟折扣任务中,将表现出高水平EtOH寻求和消费的偏爱酒精(P)大鼠,与尽管消费量大但仅表现出适度EtOH寻求的高饮酒(HAD2)大鼠,以及表现出适度寻求和消费的长Evans(LE)大鼠进行比较。随后在一个操作性自我给药任务中确认了EtOH寻求和消费表型,该任务在EtOH寻求和饮用之间进行了程序分离。
P大鼠比HAD2大鼠和LE大鼠更倾向于延迟折扣,而HAD2大鼠和LE大鼠在折扣方面没有差异。此外,P大鼠表现出比HAD2大鼠和LE大鼠更高的EtOH寻求,从而复制了EtOH寻求和饮用表型,并且HAD2大鼠和P大鼠的EtOH消费量均高于LE大鼠。
只有高寻求品系,即P大鼠,表现出升高的延迟折扣水平。这表明这种行为控制不足的指标与酒精相关的欲求过程而非消费过程特别相关,因为适度寻求/高饮用品系并未表现出冲动性增加。这一发现支持了延迟折扣仅与某些足以但并非导致成瘾易感性所必需的特定过程相关的假设,因此也支持将升高的延迟折扣水平作为酒精中毒的一个易感风险因素。