Karlsson Oskar, Roman Erika
Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, K8, 171 76 Stockholm, Sweden; Drug Safety and Toxicology, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University, P.O. Box 591, 751 24 Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Neuropharmacology, Addiction and Behavior, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University, P.O. Box 591, SE-751 24 Uppsala, Sweden.
Alcohol. 2016 Feb;50:51-6. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2015.10.003. Epub 2015 Nov 24.
The acute effects of alcohol administration are age-, dose-, time- and task-dependent. Although generally considered to be a sedative drug, alcohol has both stimulatory and depressant effects on behavior, depending on dose and time. Alcohol-induced motor activating effects are consistently shown in mice but rarely demonstrated in adult, outbred rats using conventional behavioral tests. The aim of the present experiment was to study acute alcohol-induced effects on behavioral profiles in a more complex environment using the novel multivariate concentric square field™ (MCSF) test, designed for assessing different behaviors in the same trial including locomotor activity. Adult male Wistar rats (Sca:WI) were administered one intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of alcohol (0.0 g/kg, 0.5 g/kg, 1.0 g/kg, or 1.5 g/kg) 5 min prior to the 30-min MCSF test. The two highest doses induced marked motor-suppressing effects. A significant interaction between group and time was found in general activity when comparing rats exposed to alcohol at 0.0 g/kg and 0.5 g/kg. In contrast to the 0.0 g/kg dose that increased the activity over time, animals administered the low dose (0.5 g/kg) demonstrated an initial high activity followed by a decline over time. No indications for acute alcohol-induced anxiolytic-like effects were found. The multivariate setting in the MCSF test appears to be sensitive for detecting motor-activating effects of low doses of alcohol as well as reduced locomotion at doses lower than in other behavioral tasks. The detection of subtle changes in behavior across time and dose is important for understanding alcohol-induced effects. This approach may be useful in evaluating alcohol doses that correspond to different degrees of intoxication in humans.
酒精给药的急性效应取决于年龄、剂量、时间和任务。尽管酒精通常被认为是一种镇静药物,但根据剂量和时间的不同,它对行为既有刺激作用又有抑制作用。酒精诱导的运动激活效应在小鼠中一直有表现,但在成年远交系大鼠中,使用传统行为测试很少能证明这一点。本实验的目的是使用新型多变量同心方场™(MCSF)测试,在更复杂的环境中研究急性酒精对行为特征的影响,该测试旨在评估同一试验中的不同行为,包括运动活动。成年雄性Wistar大鼠(Sca:WI)在30分钟的MCSF测试前5分钟腹腔注射一次酒精(0.0 g/kg、0.5 g/kg、1.0 g/kg或1.5 g/kg)。两个最高剂量诱导了明显的运动抑制效应。在比较接受0.0 g/kg和0.5 g/kg酒精的大鼠时,发现组和时间之间在总体活动上存在显著交互作用。与随着时间增加活动的0.0 g/kg剂量不同,接受低剂量(0.5 g/kg)酒精的动物表现出最初的高活动,随后随着时间下降。未发现急性酒精诱导的抗焦虑样效应的迹象。MCSF测试中的多变量设置似乎对检测低剂量酒精的运动激活效应以及低于其他行为任务剂量时的运动减少很敏感。检测行为随时间和剂量的细微变化对于理解酒精诱导的效应很重要。这种方法可能有助于评估与人类不同程度中毒相对应 的酒精剂量。