Dess N K, Minor T R, Brewer J
Department of Psychology, Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA 90041.
Physiol Behav. 1989 May;45(5):975-83. doi: 10.1016/0031-9384(89)90224-2.
Three experiments examined food intake and body weight in rats after exposure to one session of intermittent, inescapable electric shock. Quinine adulteration and shock both suppressed feeding (Experiment 1); recovery of feeding after shock was impeded when quinine adulteration was combined with a mild daily stress reinstatement (Experiment 2). Body weight also was suppressed by shock (Experiments 1 and 2); control over shock provided some protection against this deficit (Experiment 3). These results suggest roles for "finickiness" and vulnerability to mild stressors in the maintenance of eating disorders associated with stress and depression. The findings also may have implications for interpretation of deficits in appetitively motivated behaviors after stress.
三项实验研究了大鼠在经历一次间歇性不可逃避电击后食物摄入量和体重的变化。奎宁掺杂和电击均抑制进食(实验1);当奎宁掺杂与轻度每日应激恢复相结合时,电击后进食的恢复受到阻碍(实验2)。电击也会抑制体重(实验1和2);对电击的控制提供了一些针对这种缺陷的保护(实验3)。这些结果表明,“挑食”和对轻度应激源的易感性在与压力和抑郁相关的饮食失调维持中起作用。这些发现也可能对解释压力后食欲驱动行为的缺陷有启示。