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Early-Life Sleep Deprivation Enhanced Alcohol Consumption in Adolescent Rats. | LitMetric

Early-Life Sleep Deprivation Enhanced Alcohol Consumption in Adolescent Rats.

Front Neurosci

Department of Pharmacological and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Houston, Houston, TX, United States.

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how sleep deprivation during early development affects alcohol consumption in adolescent rats.
  • Male Sprague Dawley rats were sleep deprived for 6-8 hours daily over two weeks, leading to increased anxiety and depression-like behaviors compared to control rats.
  • Notably, the sleep-deprived rats displayed a significant preference for alcohol, consuming more than control rats by day 5 of the experiment, suggesting a link between early-life sleep deprivation and higher alcohol consumption.

Article Abstract

Evidence in the literature suggests that sleep deprivation during early-life developmental stages, by impacting important processes such as the reward circuit maturation, may increase the vulnerability for alcohol and substance use. The mechanisms involved are not fully understood. In this study, utilizing our previously established model, we examined the impact of early-life sleep deprivation on alcohol consumption in adolescent rats. Male Sprague Dawley rats served as either the control (CON) or sleep-deprived (SD) group. Sleep deprivation was induced using a Pinnacle automated sleep deprivation apparatus. The SD group of rats was sleep deprived for 6-8 h/day for 14 days from postnatal day (PND)19 to PND32. At PND33, anxiety- and depression-like behaviors were assessed in rats using elevated plus maze and sucrose splash test, respectively. At PND39, alcohol consumption was assessed in rats for five consecutive days using the two-bottle choice paradigm, water versus 5% ethanol. SD rats exhibited significant anxiety- and depression-like behaviors as compared to CON rats. Interestingly, SD rats consumed a larger volume of alcohol when compared to CON rats, which was significantly higher at day 5 (mean of alcohol consumption (ml) ± SD; CON = 6.67 ± 3.42; SD = 19.00 ± 6.05, = 0.0126). SD rats also showed high preference for alcohol over water, which was significantly higher at day 5 (mean of alcohol preference (%) ± SD; CON = 26.85 ± 14.97; SD = 57.69 ± 5.61, = 0.014). Our data suggest that early-life sleep deprivation enhanced alcohol consumption in adolescent rats.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9081815PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.856120DOI Listing

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