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  • Title: An initial, three-day-long treatment with alcohol induces a long-lasting phenomenon of selective tolerance in the activity of the rat hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
    Author: Lee S, Rivier C.
    Journal: J Neurosci; 1997 Nov 15; 17(22):8856-66. PubMed ID: 9348353.
    Abstract:
    We determined whether an initial alcohol challenge induced long-lasting changes in the activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Adult male rats received intragastric injections of the vehicle or a moderately intoxicating dose of alcohol (3.0 gm/kg) daily for 3 d. When animals were acutely challenged with alcohol 3-12 d later, their ACTH and corticosterone responses were significantly blunted, compared with that of vehicle-pretreated rats. In contrast, exposure to mild electric foot shocks induced a pattern of ACTH secretion that was comparable in animals administered alcohol or the vehicle previously, indicating a lack of cross-tolerance. No significant differences were observed in pituitary responsiveness to corticotropin-releasing factor or vasopressin in rats pretreated with the vehicle or alcohol. The influence of the initial drug treatment was not mimicked by exposure to foot shocks, nor was it prevented by administering a potent corticotropin-releasing factor antagonist to block the elevations in plasma ACTH and corticosterone induced by this initial treatment. Finally, we found that rats injected initially with the vehicle and challenged subsequently with alcohol exhibited the expected increased neuronal activation (measured by the upregulation of steady-state mRNA and protein levels of immediate early genes) in the paraventricular nucleus of their hypothalamus. In contrast, this response was markedly decreased in animals exposed previously to the drug. To our knowledge, this is the first report that exposure to a stress (i.e., alcohol), although not immediately altering the response of the HPA axis to this particular signal, induces a selective tolerance that is both slow to develop and long-lasting. The primary mechanism mediating the ability of an initial drug treatment to decrease subsequent responses of the HPA axis to a second drug challenge seems to be the inability of hypothalamic neurons to respond adequately to this second challenge.
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