Adolescent alcohol binge drinking and withdrawal: behavioural, brain GFAP-positive astrocytes and acute methamphetamine effects in adult female rats.

Psychopharmacology (Berl)

Behavioural Neuropharmacology Laboratory, School of Psychological Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Alcopop beverages, high in sugar and alcohol, are commonly the first drinks for young females and may influence drinking behavior and brain function related to methamphetamine use.
  • This study investigated how binge drinking of alcopops affects consumption levels, anxiety behavior, sensitivity to methamphetamine, and astrocyte expression in certain brain regions in adolescent female rats.
  • Results showed that rats consuming alcopops drank more than those drinking ethanol alone, but drinking habits and brain changes did not significantly affect anxiety or astrocyte levels after withdrawal.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Alcopop beverages are generally the first alcoholic beverage that young females drink which contain high levels of sugar and alcohol. The over-consumption of these drinks may encourage alcohol co-administration with methamphetamine (METH) impacting on drinking behaviour and glial function.

Aims: The aims of this study were to evaluate the effect of adolescent binge alcohol exposure on consumption level, anxiety-like behaviour, cross-sensitization with METH and on astrocyte expression in reward related brain regions.

Methods: Adolescent female Sprague-Dawley rats had daily 1-hour oral alcohol consumption of alcopop (ALCP; with sucrose) or ethanol-only (ETOH; without sucrose), transitioned from 5 to 15% (v/v) ethanol content for 34 days. Water and sucrose groups act as controls. During alcohol withdrawal, rats were tested for anxiety on the elevated plus maze (EPM) and locomotor activity following saline or METH (1 mg/kg i.p) treatment. Brains were then collected to assess astrocyte immunofluorescence for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in reward-related brain regions.

Results: Rats pretreated with 5% ALCP consumed significantly more volume and ethanol intake when compared to 5% EtOH rats. Both ALCP and EtOH groups had a higher preference ratio for 5% than 15% alcohol solutions and ALCP rats had greater ethanol intake at 15% than EtOH rats. Alcohol withdrawal showed no significant differences between groups on anxiety, METH cross-sensitization effects or GFAP intensity in the regions studied.

Conclusions: Overall, the addition of sucrose to alcoholic solutions encouraged female rats to consume larger volumes and greater ethanol intake compared to ethanol-only solutions, yet did not have long lasting effects on behaviour and astrocytes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11269403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-024-06580-2DOI Listing

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