Alcohol
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 45-60, May 2003

Adolescent rats discriminate a mild state of ethanol intoxication likely to act as an appetitive unconditioned stimulus

  • Juan M Fernández-Vidal

      Affiliations

    • Instituto de Investigación Médica M. y M. Ferreyra, Córdoba, C.P. 5000, Argentina
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Instituto Ferreyra, Casilla de Correo 389, CP: 5000 Córdoba, Argentina. Tel.: +54-351-468-1465; fax: +54-351-469-5163
  • ,
  • Norman E Spear

      Affiliations

    • Center for Developmental Psychobiology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA
  • ,
  • Juan Carlos Molina

      Affiliations

    • Instituto de Investigación Médica M. y M. Ferreyra, Córdoba, C.P. 5000, Argentina
    • Center for Developmental Psychobiology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA
    • J.C. Molina is also working at Facultad de Psicologı́a, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, CP: 5000 Córdoba, Argentina.

Received 29 June 2002; received in revised form 7 March 2003; accepted 22 March 2003.

Editor: T.R. Jerrells

Abstract 

Practically no information is available in relation to the capability of the adolescent animal in terms of discriminating postabsorptive effects of ethanol. Three experiments were conducted to analyze whether young, genetically heterogeneous rats discriminate different stages of the process of intoxication exerted by a low dose (0.5 g/kg) of ethanol. An ethanol pharmacokinetic profile was first examined to select two stages within the process of ethanol intoxication that, as a function of the corresponding blood ethanol concentrations (BECs), could represent two potentially discriminable drug states. In a second experiment, sucrose was available when the BECs of rats peaked or were of a lesser magnitude (5 and 30 min postadministration time, respectively). When animals were tested under similar or different drug states relative to the training procedure, no behavioral evidence indicative of differential sucrose expectancy was obtained. In Experiment 3, rats discriminated each of the previously defined ethanol states from a non-drug state. Unexpectedly, it was also found that the pharmacological effects of the 0.5-g/kg dose of ethanol are likely to support appetitive associative learning that involves the taste of sucrose as a conditioned stimulus. The apparent positive affective components of the state of ethanol intoxication have rarely been observed in genetically heterogeneous rats with rather brief experiences with the drug's effects.

Keywords:  Ethanol, State discrimination, Appetitive conditioning, Nose-poking, Sucrose, Adolescent rat

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PII: S0741-8329(03)00093-4

doi:10.1016/S0741-8329(03)00093-4

Alcohol
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 45-60, May 2003