Center for Behavioral Teratology, Dept. of Psychology, San Diego State University, USA.
Center for Behavioral Teratology, Dept. of Psychology, San Diego State University, USA.
Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2020 Nov-Dec;82:106930. doi: 10.1016/j.ntt.2020.106930. Epub 2020 Oct 18.
Cannabis is the most frequently used illicit drug among pregnant women, yet the potential consequences of prenatal cannabis exposure on development are not well understood. Electronic cigarettes have become an increasingly popular route of administration among pregnant women, in part to user's perception that e-cigarettes are a safer route for consuming cannabis products. Importantly, half of pregnant women who consume cannabis also report consuming alcohol, but research investigating co-consumption of these drugs is limited, particularly with current routes of administration. The purpose of this study was to establish a co-exposure vapor inhalation model of alcohol and THC in pregnant rats, to ultimately determine the effects on fetal development. Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to moderate doses of THC via e-cigarettes, alcohol, the combination, or vehicle daily from gestational days 5-20. Importantly, pharmacokinetic interactions of alcohol and THC were observed during pregnancy. Combined exposure consistently increased blood alcohol concentrations, indicating that THC alters alcohol metabolism. In addition, THC levels also increased over the course of pregnancy and THC metabolism was altered by alcohol. Alcohol, but not THC, exposure during pregnancy reduced maternal weight gain, despite no group differences in food intake. Neither prenatal alcohol nor THC exposure altered gestational length, litter size, sex ratio or birth weight. However, prenatal alcohol exposure delayed eye opening, and prenatal THC exposure decreased body weights during adolescence among offspring. These individual and synergistic effects suggest that this novel co-exposure vapor inhalation paradigm can effectively be used to expose pregnant dams, exerting some effects on fetal development, while avoiding nutritional confounds, birth complications, or changes in litter size. With this model, we have demonstrated that combining THC and alcohol alters drug metabolism, which could have important consequences on prenatal development.
大麻是孕妇中最常使用的非法药物,但产前大麻暴露对发育的潜在影响尚不清楚。电子烟已成为孕妇中越来越受欢迎的给药途径,部分原因是使用者认为电子烟是吸食大麻制品的更安全途径。重要的是,一半吸食大麻的孕妇也报告饮酒,但研究调查这些药物的共同消费是有限的,特别是对于目前的给药途径。本研究的目的是建立一种在怀孕大鼠中同时暴露于酒精和 THC 的共暴露蒸气吸入模型,最终确定对胎儿发育的影响。怀孕的 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠从妊娠第 5-20 天每天通过电子烟、酒精、组合或载体暴露于中等剂量的 THC。重要的是,在怀孕期间观察到酒精和 THC 的药代动力学相互作用。联合暴露始终增加血液中的酒精浓度,表明 THC 改变了酒精代谢。此外,在怀孕期间 THC 水平也增加,并且酒精改变了 THC 的代谢。尽管在怀孕期间暴露于酒精或 THC 都没有改变食物摄入量,但酒精暴露而不是 THC 暴露会减少母体体重增加。然而,产前酒精或 THC 暴露都不会改变妊娠期、窝仔数、性别比例或出生体重。然而,产前酒精暴露会延迟眼睛张开,而产前 THC 暴露会降低后代青春期的体重。这些个体和协同作用表明,这种新型共暴露蒸气吸入范式可有效用于暴露怀孕的母鼠,对胎儿发育产生一些影响,同时避免营养混淆、出生并发症或窝仔数变化。通过这种模型,我们已经证明,将 THC 和酒精结合使用会改变药物代谢,这可能对产前发育产生重要影响。