Long- vs short-access cocaine alters behavioral inhibition for cocaine in male rats.

Pharmacol Biochem Behav

Department of Psychological Science, Creighton University, 2500 California Plaza HLSB 302, Omaha, NE 68178, United States. Electronic address:

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Impulsivity and behavioral inhibition are linked to substance misuse, especially cocaine use disorder, with variations based on cocaine use history and dependence levels.
  • Rats in this study self-administered cocaine under different access conditions: one group had extended access (6 hours) while the other had short access (1 hour), to evaluate behavioral inhibition.
  • Results showed that rats with extended cocaine access demonstrated significantly impaired behavioral inhibition compared to both their baseline performance and the short access group, suggesting that heavy cocaine use negatively affects the ability to inhibit future use.

Article Abstract

Impulsivity and behavioral inhibition are measures commonly associated with substance misuse, particularly cocaine use disorder. However, patterns of impulsive behaviors have been shown to differ based on cocaine use history and level of cocaine dependence. Extended cocaine access, which more closely models neural and behavioral changes that take place during the development of problematic cocaine use, has been shown to decrease behavioral inhibition in comparison to limited cocaine access. However, previous preclinical studies investigating these relationships have been mostly correlational and only utilize non-drug rewards. This study aims to utilize a differential rates of low reinforcement (DRL) schedule to investigate the impact of extended access to cocaine on behavioral inhibition toward a cocaine reinforcer. Male Sprague Dawley rats first self-administered intravenous cocaine infusions on a DRL schedule of reinforcement before being split into two groups: one given 6-h extended cocaine access (LgA) and one given 1-h short cocaine access (ShA) for 10 daily sessions. Following a washout period, the rats were placed back on DRL cocaine self-administration sessions. Results revealed that LgA rats showed impaired performance on the behavioral inhibition measure during the DRL self-administration sessions compared to baseline DRL performance and compared to ShA post-access behavioral inhibition measures. These results indicate that extended cocaine access impairs an organism's behavioral inhibition toward future cocaine use, indicating that those individuals with a history of heavy cocaine use will have impaired behavioral inhibition toward future cocaine use.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbb.2024.173929DOI Listing

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