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Journal Article

Citation

Ehringer MA, Hoft NR, Zunhammer M. Alcohol 2009; 43(6): 443-452.

Affiliation

University of Colorado, Institute for Behavioral Genetics, 447 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0447, USA. marissa.ehringer@colorado.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.alcohol.2009.06.003

PMID

19801274

Abstract

Studies of the behavioral effects of alcohol in humans and rodent models have implicated a number of neurological pathways and genes. Separate studies have shown that certain regions of the brain are involved in behavioral responses to exercise. The aim of this study was to determine whether mice which normally voluntarily consume high amounts of alcohol (C57BL/6 strain) would exhibit reduced alcohol consumption when given access to a running wheel under two different models of voluntary consumption: unlimited access two-bottle choice and limited access drinking in the dark (DID). Under the two-bottle choice model, the animals voluntarily consumed less alcohol when a wheel was present in their cage. However, sex-specific differences emerged because female mice voluntarily consumed less alcohol when they have the opportunity to exercise on a running wheel, whereas male mice consumed less alcohol even if the running wheel was locked. There were no significant differences observed in alcohol metabolism or food consumption. Under the DID protocol, no differences in alcohol consumption were observed in the presence of a running wheel. These results suggest that exercise may be a useful approach to consider for treatment for some types of chronic human alcohol problem behaviors, but may be less applicable to human binge drinking.


Language: en

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