de la Torre M Lourdes, Escarabajal M Dolores, Agüero Ángeles
Department of Psychology, University of Jaén, Campus Las Lagunillas s/n, 23071, Jaen, Spain.
Department of Psychology, University of Jaén, Campus Las Lagunillas s/n, 23071, Jaen, Spain.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2015 Oct;137:7-15. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2015.07.011. Epub 2015 Jul 26.
Vulnerability to ethanol abuse may be a function of the balance between the opposing (aversive and rewarding) motivational effects of the drug. The study of these effects is particularly important for understanding alcohol addiction. Research in this field seems to point out that ethanol effects are determined by a set of internal factors (sex, ethanol intake history, etc.), as well as by environmental conditions surrounding the individual (i.e., stress) and, of course, the interactions between all these factors. This work explores sex differences in sensitivity to aversive effects of ethanol using the procedure of flavor avoidance learning (FAL), as well as the effect of this learning experience on subsequent voluntary ethanol consumption, in adult rats. The results obtained indicated a slight sex based difference in the amount of FAL acquired in that females acquisition was weaker (experiment 1), and a differing influence of previous experience with the aversive effects of ethanol on the voluntary consumption of the drug for each sex (experiment 2). In particular, it was observed that female ethanol-naive rats showed a higher intake level and preference for ethanol than both ethanol-experienced female rats and ethanol-naive male rats. In contrast, the ethanol-experienced male rats showed a greater consumption of and preference for ethanol than ethanol-naive male rats and ethanol-experienced female rats. These data are discussed noting a range of possible explicative factors (sex hormones, hedonic processing, etc.), but further studies are warranted to elucidate the mechanisms by which ethanol pre-exposure influences the subsequent intake of ethanol differently by sex.
对乙醇滥用的易感性可能取决于该药物相反的(厌恶和奖赏)动机效应之间的平衡。对这些效应的研究对于理解酒精成瘾尤为重要。该领域的研究似乎指出,乙醇效应由一系列内部因素(性别、乙醇摄入史等)以及个体周围的环境条件(即压力)决定,当然还有所有这些因素之间的相互作用。这项工作使用气味回避学习(FAL)程序,探讨成年大鼠对乙醇厌恶效应敏感性的性别差异,以及这种学习经历对随后自愿乙醇消费的影响。获得的结果表明,在获得的FAL量上存在基于性别的细微差异,即雌性的获得较弱(实验1),并且乙醇厌恶效应的先前经历对每种性别的药物自愿消费有不同影响(实验2)。具体而言,观察到未接触过乙醇的雌性大鼠比接触过乙醇的雌性大鼠和未接触过乙醇的雄性大鼠表现出更高的乙醇摄入量和偏好。相比之下,接触过乙醇的雄性大鼠比未接触过乙醇的雄性大鼠和接触过乙醇的雌性大鼠表现出更大的乙醇消费量和偏好。讨论了这些数据,并指出了一系列可能的解释因素(性激素、享乐加工等),但仍需要进一步研究来阐明乙醇预先接触对随后不同性别的乙醇摄入量产生不同影响的机制。