Naltrexone infusion inhibits the development of preference for a high-sucrose diet
1 Minnesota Obesity Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Minneapolis 55417; and Departments of 2 Psychiatry, 3 Psychology, and 4 Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 We hypothesized that the opioid antagonist naltrexone would inhibit the redevelopment of a preferen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology integrative and comparative physiology, 2002-11, Vol.283 (5), p.1149-R1154 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1 Minnesota Obesity Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center,
Minneapolis 55417; and Departments of 2 Psychiatry,
3 Psychology, and 4 Medicine, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
We hypothesized that the opioid
antagonist naltrexone would inhibit the redevelopment of a preference
for a high-sucrose diet after an abstention period from this diet. Rats
that chose between a starch or sucrose diet for 10 days preferred the
sucrose diet. Rats were then given access to the starch diet alone for
another 10-day period. A miniosmotic pump containing saline or
naltrexone was then implanted (70 µg/h; 1.7 mg/day) for ~10 days.
During the saline infusion, 77% of the total energy came from the
sucrose diet, whereas during the naltrexone infusion, 33% of the total energy came from the sucrose diet. We repeated this study in another group of rats but did not restrict the sucrose diet. In this case naltrexone failed to decrease preference for the sucrose diet. Thus
naltrexone infusion inhibited redevelopment of a preference for a
sucrose diet after a period of restriction to a starch diet for 10 days
but had no effect on preference if both diets were present throughout
the study.
opioids; reward; food intake; satiety; learning |
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ISSN: | 0363-6119 1522-1490 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpregu.00040.2002 |