1. Sugar, a powerful substitute for ethanol in ethanol postdependent rats: Relevance for clinical consideration?
- Author
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Clément Audegond, Serge H. Ahmed, Régis Alarcon, Mickaël Naassila, Bertrand Nalpas, Margaret P. Martinetti, Pascal Perney, Stéphanie Alaux-Cantin, and Emmanuelle Simon O'Brien
- Subjects
Male ,Sucrose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Self Administration ,Craving ,Alcohol ,Alcohol use disorder ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Long-Evans ,Sugar ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Motivation ,Quinine ,Ethanol ,Chemistry ,Addiction ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,030227 psychiatry ,Alcoholism ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,Conditioning, Operant ,medicine.symptom ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Sugar has been shown to be a powerful substitute for drugs in preclinical studies on addiction. However, the link between sugar intake and alcohol use disorder (AUD) is poorly understood. We assessed the influence of sucrose on ethanol drinking in both nondependent (ND) and dependent (D) Long-Evans rats during acute withdrawal using the postdependent state model. Ethanol (10%-40%) and sucrose (1%-4%) solutions were offered in an operant paradigm either independently or concurrently under ratio schedules of reinforcement. We showed that D rats displayed an enhanced motivation for both 10% ethanol solution (10E) and 4% sucrose solution (4S) as compared with ND rats, and a clear preference for 4S was observed in both groups. During acute withdrawal, D rats showed a strong motivation for 30% ethanol (30E), even when adulterated with quinine, but still preferred 4S despite the fact that a high level of negative reinforcement could be expected. However, when a premix solution (30E4S) was offered concurrently with 4S, the preference for 4S was lost in D animals, which consumed as much premix as 4S, whereas ND animals displayed preference for 4S. Altogether, those results suggest that reinforcing properties of sucrose surpass those of ethanol in D rats under acute withdrawal, which indicates that sugar is a powerful substitute for ethanol. Our results suggest that craving for sugar may be increased in AUD patients during withdrawal and raise the issue of dependence transfer from alcohol to sugar.
- Published
- 2021
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