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Journal Article

Citation

Jeanblanc J, Sauton P, Jeanblanc V, Legastelois R, Echeverry-Alzate V, Lebourgeois S, Gonzalez-Marin MDC, Naassila M. Addict. Biol. 2019; 24(4): 664-675.

Affiliation

Research Group on Alcohol and Pharmacodependences-INSERM U1247, University of Picardie Jules Verne, Amiens, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/adb.12631

PMID

29863763

Abstract

Binge drinking (BD) is often defined as a large amount of alcohol consumed in a 'short' period of time or 'per occasion'. In clinical research, few researchers have included the notion of 'speed of drinking' in the definition of BD. Here, we aimed to describe a novel pre-clinical model based on voluntary operant BD, which included both the quantity of alcohol and the rapidity of consumption. In adult Long-Evans male rats, we induced BD by regularly decreasing the duration of ethanol self-administration from 1-hour to 15-minute sessions. We compared the behavioral consequences of BD with the behaviors of rats subjected to moderate drinking or heavy drinking (HD). We found that, despite high ethanol consumption levels (1.2 g/kg/15 minutes), the total amounts consumed were insufficient to differentiate HD from BD. However, consumption speed could distinguish between these groups. The motivation to consume was higher in BD than in HD rats. After BD, we observed alterations in locomotor coordination in rats that consumed greater than 0.8 g/kg, which was rarely observed in HD rats. Finally, chronic BD led to worse performance in a decision-making task, and as expected, we observed a lower stimulated dopaminergic release within nucleus accumbens slices in poor decision makers. Our BD model exhibited good face validity and can now provide animals voluntarily consuming very rapidly enough alcohol to achieve intoxication levels and thus allowing the study of the complex interaction between individual and environmental factors underlying BD behavior.

© 2018 Society for the Study of Addiction.


Language: en

Keywords

animal model; binge drinking; decision making; fast cyclic voltammetry; operant self-administration

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