Distinct relationships between risky decision making and cocaine self-administration under short- and long-access conditions

Substance use is strongly associated with impaired decision making, with cocaine use particularly linked to elevated risky and impulsive choice. It is not clear, however, whether such maladaptive decision making is a consequence of cocaine use or instead precedes and predisposes individuals to cocai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry 2020-03, Vol.98, p.109791-109791, Article 109791
Hauptverfasser: Orsini, Caitlin A., Blaes, Shelby L., Dragone, Richard J., Betzhold, Sara M., Finner, Alyssa M., Bizon, Jennifer L., Setlow, Barry
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Substance use is strongly associated with impaired decision making, with cocaine use particularly linked to elevated risky and impulsive choice. It is not clear, however, whether such maladaptive decision making is a consequence of cocaine use or instead precedes and predisposes individuals to cocaine use. The current study was designed to specifically address the latter possibility with respect to risky choice in both male and female rats. Rats were first trained in a “Risky Decision-making Task” (RDT), in which they made discrete choices between a small, “safe” food reward and a large, “risky” food reward accompanied by increasing probabilities of mild footshock punishment. After reaching stable performance, rats underwent jugular catheter surgery followed by either short-access cocaine self-administration sessions (2 h, 0.5 mg/kg/infusion) for 5 days or long-access cocaine self-administration sessions (6 h, 0.5 mg/kg/infusion) for 14 days. Under short-access conditions, there was no relationship between risk preference and changes in cocaine intake over time, but greater risk aversion in females predicted greater overall cocaine intake. Under long-access conditions, heightened risk taking predicted greater escalation of cocaine intake over the course of self-administration, supporting the notion that pre-existing risk-taking behavior predicts cocaine intake. Collectively, results from these experiments have implications for understanding and identifying pre-existing vulnerabilities to substance use, which may lead to strategies to prevent development of substance use disorders. •Cocaine use is associated with heightened risk taking in humans.•It is unclear whether this maladaptive risk taking is antecedent to or a cause of cocaine use.•This study assessed relationships between risk preference and subsequent cocaine use in rats.•Greater risk aversion in females predicted greater intake in short-access cocaine conditions.•Greater risk taking predicted greater escalation of intake in long-access cocaine conditions.
ISSN:0278-5846
1878-4216
DOI:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2019.109791