Froehlich Janice C, Hausauer Brett, Fischer Stephen, Wise Bradley, Rasmussen Dennis D
Indiana University School of Medicine , Indianapolis, Indiana.
VISN 20 Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center , VA Puget Sound Health Care System and University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2015 Aug;39(8):1538-46. doi: 10.1111/acer.12789.
Many alcoholics and heavy drinkers undergo repeated cycles of alcohol abstinence followed by relapse to alcohol drinking; a pattern that contributes to escalated alcohol intake over time. In rodents, alcohol drinking that is interspersed with periods of alcohol deprivation (imposed abstinence) increases alcohol intake during reaccess to alcohol. This is termed the "alcohol deprivation effect" or "ADE" and is a model of alcohol relapse in humans. We have previously reported that prazosin reduces alcohol drinking during both brief and prolonged treatment in rats selectively bred for alcohol preference ("P" rats). This study explores whether prazosin prevents alcohol "relapse" in P rats, as reflected by a reduced or abolished ADE.
Adult male P rats were given 24-hour access to food and water and scheduled access to alcohol (15 and 30% v/v solutions presented concurrently) for 2 h/d. After 5 weeks, rats underwent imposed alcohol deprivation for 2 weeks, followed by alcohol reaccess for 2 weeks, and this pattern was repeated for a total of 3 cycles. Rats were injected with prazosin (0, 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 mg/kg body weight, intraperitoneally) once a day for the first 5 days of each alcohol reaccess cycle.
Alcohol intake increased on the first day of each alcohol reaccess cycle, demonstrating the formation of an ADE. The ADE was short-lived, lasting only 1 day, during each of the 3 cycles. Prazosin, in all doses tested, prevented the expression of an ADE in all 3 alcohol reaccess cycles.
Prazosin decreases alcohol intake in P rats even in a situation that would be expected to increase alcohol drinking, namely following periods of alcohol deprivation. This suggests that prazosin may be effective in reducing alcohol relapse that often occurs during attempts to achieve permanent alcohol abstinence in treatment-seeking alcoholics and heavy drinkers.
许多酗酒者和大量饮酒者经历反复戒酒然后复饮的循环;随着时间推移,这种模式会导致饮酒量增加。在啮齿动物中,穿插有戒酒期(强制戒酒)的饮酒会使再次接触酒精期间的饮酒量增加。这被称为“酒精剥夺效应”或“ADE”,是人类酒精复饮的一种模型。我们之前报道过,哌唑嗪在对酒精有偏好的选择性培育大鼠(“P”大鼠)的短期和长期治疗中均能减少酒精摄入量。本研究探讨哌唑嗪是否能预防P大鼠的酒精“复饮”,这可通过ADE减弱或消除来体现。
成年雄性P大鼠可随时获取食物和水,并按计划每天有2小时的时间接触酒精(同时提供15%和30%体积/体积的溶液)。5周后,大鼠经历2周的强制戒酒,随后2周再次接触酒精,此模式共重复3个周期。在每个酒精再接触周期的前5天,大鼠每天腹腔注射一次哌唑嗪(0、0.5、1.0或2.0毫克/千克体重)。
在每个酒精再接触周期的第一天,酒精摄入量增加,表明ADE形成。在3个周期的每个周期中,ADE都是短暂的,仅持续1天。在所有测试剂量下,哌唑嗪在所有3个酒精再接触周期中均能预防ADE的表现。
即使在预期会增加酒精摄入量的情况下,即酒精剥夺期后,哌唑嗪也能降低P大鼠的酒精摄入量。这表明哌唑嗪可能有效减少在寻求治疗的酗酒者和大量饮酒者试图实现永久戒酒期间经常发生的酒精复饮。