Abstract

Bulbectomy has been previously shown to produce the specific antidepressant-sensitive syndrome in C57Bl/6j, but not DBA/2j mice. The present study examined the effect of the depression on voluntary alcohol consumption. Alcohol consumption and alcohol preference (% of alcohol solution in total liquid) in a free-choice, two-bottle situation was measured in C57BL/6j and DBA/2j mice after sham-operation, anosmia with 10% ZnSO 4, or bulbectomy. Both anosmic and bulbectomized mice of both strains consumed more alcohol and showed stronger preference for alcohol than sham-operated mice. In DBA/2j mice both operations altered alcohol consumption of the whole population, and the effect of bulbectomy was stronger. In C57Bl/6j mice bulbectomy and, to a less degree, anosmia seemed to affect predominantly the low-drinking animals. Chronic treatment with antidepressants amitriptyline (20 mg/kg), trazodone (20 mg/kg), and imipramine (10 mg/kg), did not change alcohol consumption in sham-operated C57Bl/6j mice. In anosmic mice antidepressants decreased alcohol preference, but only amitryptyline also decreased alcohol consumption. All antidepressants decreased both alcohol consumption and preference in bulbectomized C57Bl/6j mice. In DBA/2j mice antidepressant treatment either increased, or did not alter alcohol consumption and preference in all groups, though the effects varied among individual antidepressants. The possible connection between the bulbectomy-induced behavioral syndrome and elevated ethanol consumption in C57Bl/6j mice is discussed.

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