Artículos de revistas
Age-related effects of chronic restraint stress on ethanol drinking, ethanol-induced sedation, and on basal and stress-induced anxiety response
Fecha
2016-03Registro en:
Fernandez, Macarena Soledad; Fabio, Maria Carolina; Miranda Morales, Roberto Sebastián; Virgolini, Miriam Beatriz; de Giovanni, Laura Noemi; et al.; Age-related effects of chronic restraint stress on ethanol drinking, ethanol-induced sedation, and on basal and stress-induced anxiety response; Elsevier Science Inc; Alcohol; 51; 3-2016; 89-100
0741-8329
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Fernandez, Macarena Soledad
Fabio, Maria Carolina
Miranda Morales, Roberto Sebastián
Virgolini, Miriam Beatriz
de Giovanni, Laura Noemi
Hansen, Cristian
Wille-bille, Aranza
Nizhnikov, Michael
Spear, Linda P.
Pautassi, Ricardo Marcos
Resumen
Adolescents are sensitive to the anxiolytic effect of ethanol, and evidence suggests that they may be more sensitive to stress than adults. Relatively little is known, however, about age-related differences in stress modulation of ethanol drinking or stress modulation of ethanol-induced sedation and hypnosis. We observed that chronic restraint stress transiently exacerbated free-choice ethanol drinking in adolescent, but not in adult, rats. Restraint stress altered exploration patterns of a light-dark box apparatus in adolescents and adults. Stressed animals spent significantly more time in the white area of the maze and made significantly more transfers between compartments than their non-stressed peers. Behavioral response to acute stress, on the other hand, was modulated by prior restraint stress only in adults. Adolescents, unlike adults, exhibited ethanol-induced motor stimulation in an open field. Stress increased the duration of loss of the righting reflex after a high ethanol dose, yet this effect was similar at both ages. Ethanol-induced sleep time was much higher in adult than in adolescent rats, yet stress diminished ethanol-induced sleep time only in adults. The study indicates age-related differences that may increase the risk for initiation and escalation in alcohol drinking.