Ingurune aberastuak nerabezaroko gehiegizko alkohol kontsumoaren ondoriozko portaera kalteak berreskuratzen ditu C57BL/6J sagu helduetan
2021
The use and abuse of alcohol (EtOH) is one of the world’s main health issues that strikingly impacts on our society, as heavy episodic drinking is becoming more and more common in the adolescence when the brain is particularly vulnerable to EtOH. However, molecular, anatomical, functional and behavioral alterations improve inyoung adult mice brains by an enriched environment (EE) exposure after adolescence EtOH consumption [21]. It remains unknown whether these beneficial effects are maintained over a long period of time after cessation of EtOH consumption. The aim of this study was to measure the long-term behavioral consequences of EtOH consumption and to explore the effects of EE in adulthood. For this goal, we treated C57BL/6J male mice with 20% EtOH or water during the 4 weeks of adolescence (p32-p56) followed by an abstinence period (p56-p90). Finally, they were exposed to EE for two weeks (p90-p104) and behavioral tests were conducted at their full adulthood: thigmotaxis for anxiety-like behaviour; novel object recognition test (NORT) for object recognition memory; novel object location test (NOLT) for location memory and beam walking balance test (BWBT) for motor coordination and balance. Object and spatial recognition memory were significantly lower in EtOH-treated mice. Also, motor coordination and balance were impaired after EtOH intake. Noticeably, memory and motor deficits reversed to control values after EE. In conclusion, we show that EE recovers the long-term behavioral and motor deficits after abusive EtOH consumption during adolescence. These results point to the beneficial effects EE have in EtOH addiction.
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