Abstract

The adrenocortical response to ethanol, histamine and electric shock was studied in the Short-Sleep (SS) and Long-Sleep (LS) mice. The plasma corticosterone levels measured at 60 min following ethanol injection were consistently higher in LS mice (males and females) than in SS mice. The corticosterone levels determined 60 min after histamine injection (50 mg/kg) or electric foot shock were not statistically different in these two lines of mice. The initial rise of the corticosteroid after ethanol injection was identical in SS and LS mice, whereas the costicosteroid response to mild stress of saline injection was different: SS mice showed higher levels of corticosterone than LS mice at 20 and 30 min after the injection. Corticosterone increment attributable to alcohol stress clearly seemed greater in LS than in SS mice, even though the adrenals of the SS mice were 20–30% heavier than those of LS. The possible significance of these endocrine differences with respect to sensitivity to ethanol and behavioral arousal level was discussed.

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