pubmed-article:8800382 | pubmed:abstractText | The hypothesis that naloxone (NAL) decreases oral ethanol intake in rats by inducing a conditioned taste aversion (CTA) to ethanol was investigated. Rats were trained to drink 8% ethanol (v/v) on a 1-hr limited-access schedule. They received 4 days of intraperitoneal injections of 10 mg/kg of NAL, 10 min before limited-access (-10MIN group), immediately after limited-access (1HR group), or 3 hr after limited-access (3HR). Ethanol intake decreased in the -10MIN and 1HR groups during the injection period and on the postinjection day. In experiment 2, rats received 4 days of NAL injections when ethanol was not available (pre-exposure), and then the paradigm was repeated. In this experiment, there was no suppression of ethanol intake for any group on the postinjection day. The decrease in ethanol intake during injections observed for the 1HR in experiment 1 and the sustained suppression postinjection was interpreted as a CTA. Pre-exposure in experiment 2 abolished the CTA. Differences in the pattern ethanol intake for the -10MIN and 3HR groups during the experiments, however, suggest that a CTA is not the sole mechanism underlying NAL's suppressant effects on ethanol intake. In conclusion, in rats both the dose of NAL and the relative timing of NAL injections and ethanol drinking effect subsequent NAL suppression of ethanol intake. | lld:pubmed |