Abstract

Neocortical inhibition and neuronal morphology were studied in rats following chronic ethanol treatment (CET). In terminal acute experiments, spontaneous neuronal discharges in pair-fed and naive rats were inhibited by epicortical stimulation, a procedure known to produce postsynaptic inhibition. Few units in CET rats were inhibited by such stimulation. Cortical recurrent inhibition, indicated by a surface-negative potential in response to antidromic stimulation of the cerebral peduncle, was little affected by a challenge dose of ethanol, compared with the response in pair-fed animals. Recurrent inhibition involves inhibitory interneurons. CET apparently made inhibitory interneurons and inhibitory postsynaptic receptors less responsive to ethanol. Apical dendritic spines on some portions of pyramidal neurons increased in number with CET. This could reflect a compensatory growth in neurons not damaged by CET. The overall observations are consistent with ethanol affecting one or more specific systems of cortical motor control as opposed to its presumed general disinhibitory effect.

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