Intermittent Access to 20% Ethanol Induces High Ethanol Consumption in Long–Evans and Wistar Rats
University of California, San Francisco · Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center · +3 more institutions
Abstract
There has been some difficulty getting standard laboratory rats to voluntarily consume large amounts of ethanol without the use of initiation procedures. It has previously been shown that standard laboratory rats will voluntarily consume high levels of ethanol if given intermittent-access to 20% ethanol in a 2-bottle-choice setting [Wise, Psychopharmacologia 29 (1973), 203]. In this study, we have further characterized this drinking model.
Ethanol-naïve Long-Evans rats were given intermittent-access to 20% ethanol (three 24-hour sessions per week). No sucrose fading was needed and water was always available ad libitum. Ethanol consumption, preference, and long-term drinking behaviors were investigated. Furthermore, to pharmacologically validate the intermittent-access 20% ethanol drinking paradigm, the efficacy of acamprosate and naltrexone in decreasing ethanol consumption were compared with those of groups given continuous-access to 10 or 20% ethanol, respectively. Additionally, ethanol consumption was investigated in Wistar and out-bred alcohol preferring (P) rats following intermittent-access to 20% ethanol.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 6.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
7- JAJeffrey A. SimmsCorresponding
University of California, San Francisco, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center
- PSPia Steensland
Zero to Three
- BMBrian Medina
National Institute on Drug Abuse, Medical University of South Carolina, University of California, San Francisco, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center
- KAKenneth Abernathy
National Institute on Drug Abuse, Medical University of South Carolina, University of California, San Francisco, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center
- LJL. Judson Chandler
National Institute on Drug Abuse, Medical University of South Carolina, University of California, San Francisco, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center
Topics & keywords
- Ethanol
- Abstinence
- Alcohol
- Naltrexone
- Water bottle
- Medicine
- Animal science
- Chemistry