Chronic cocaine or ethanol exposure during adolescence alters novelty-related behaviors in adulthood

Adolescence is a time of high-risk behavior and increased exploration. This developmental period is marked by a greater probability to initiate drug use and is associated with an increased risk to develop addiction and adulthood dependency and drug use at this time is associated with an increased ri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmacology, biochemistry and behavior biochemistry and behavior, 2007-04, Vol.86 (4), p.637-642
Hauptverfasser: Stansfield, Kirstie H., Kirstein, Cheryl L.
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description Adolescence is a time of high-risk behavior and increased exploration. This developmental period is marked by a greater probability to initiate drug use and is associated with an increased risk to develop addiction and adulthood dependency and drug use at this time is associated with an increased risk. Human adolescents are predisposed toward an increased likelihood of risk-taking behaviors [Zuckerman M. Sensation seeking and the endogenous deficit theory of drug abuse. NIDA Res Monogr 1986;74:59–70.], including drug use or initiation. In the present study, adolescent animals were exposed to twenty days of either saline (0.9% sodium chloride), cocaine (20 mg/kg) or ethanol (1 g/kg) i.p. followed by a fifteen-day washout period. All animals were tested as adults on several behavioral measures including locomotor activity induced by a novel environment, time spent in the center of an open field, novelty preference and novel object exploration. Animals exposed to cocaine during adolescence and tested as adults exhibited a greater locomotor response in a novel environment, spent less time in the center of the novel open field and spent less time with a novel object, results that are indicative of a stress or anxiogenic response to novelty or a novel situation. Adolescent animals chronically administered ethanol and tested as adults, unlike cocaine-exposed were not different from controls in a novel environment, indicated by locomotor activity or time spent with a novel object. However, ethanol-exposed animals approached the novel object more, suggesting that exposure to ethanol during development may result in less-inhibited behaviors during adulthood. The differences in adult behavioral responses after drug exposure during adolescence are likely due to differences in the mechanisms of action of the drugs and subsequent reward and/or stress responsivity. Future studies are needed to determine the neural substrates of these long lasting drug-induced changes.
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This developmental period is marked by a greater probability to initiate drug use and is associated with an increased risk to develop addiction and adulthood dependency and drug use at this time is associated with an increased risk. Human adolescents are predisposed toward an increased likelihood of risk-taking behaviors [Zuckerman M. Sensation seeking and the endogenous deficit theory of drug abuse. NIDA Res Monogr 1986;74:59–70.], including drug use or initiation. In the present study, adolescent animals were exposed to twenty days of either saline (0.9% sodium chloride), cocaine (20 mg/kg) or ethanol (1 g/kg) i.p. followed by a fifteen-day washout period. All animals were tested as adults on several behavioral measures including locomotor activity induced by a novel environment, time spent in the center of an open field, novelty preference and novel object exploration. 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subjects Addictive behaviors
Adolescence
Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior - drug effects
Adolescent Behavior - physiology
Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Alcoholism
Alcoholism - psychology
Alcoholism and acute alcohol poisoning
Animals
Behavior, Animal - drug effects
Behavior, Animal - physiology
Biological and medical sciences
Cocaine
Cocaine - administration & dosage
Cocaine - toxicity
Cocaine-Related Disorders - psychology
Development
Ethanol
Ethanol - administration & dosage
Ethanol - toxicity
Exploratory Behavior - drug effects
Exploratory Behavior - physiology
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Neuropharmacology
Novelty preference
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Psychoanaleptics: cns stimulant, antidepressant agent, nootropic agent, mood stabilizer..., (alzheimer disease)
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Psychopharmacology
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Toxicology
title Chronic cocaine or ethanol exposure during adolescence alters novelty-related behaviors in adulthood
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