Abstract
Recent studies from our lab have demonstrated that intermittent high-fat diet access reduces alcohol drinking in rats. However, it was unclear if caloric overload, palatability, or diet itself triggered reduced alcohol drinking. It is also unknown if a similar paradigm could reduce relapse-like alcohol drinking. The presented study tested the hypothesis that acute intermittent palatable diet (PD) access would rescue relapse-like drinking and palatability, but not diet itself contributes to reduced drinking. Male Long Evans rats received six-weeks intermittent or chronic chow (controls) or PDs (high-fat diet, high-sugar diet) exposure, and alcohol testing occurred following PDs suspension. Alcohol intake was not significantly different among groups in either condition, suggesting that diet itself did not impact alcohol drinking. A subset of these rats received two-weeks intermittent PDs (Int-PDs) exposure and alcohol testing reinitiated while Int-PDs access continued. Alcohol intake significantly escalated (~137% compared to baseline; alcohol deprivation effect) in the chow controls, whereas it remained unchanged in PD groups. These data demonstrate the critical importance of acute intermittent PDs availability and its protective effect in relapse-like drinking. To assess the contribution of palatability in reduced alcohol drinking, a separate group of rats received two-weeks intermittent high-sugar diet (Int-HSD) or saccharin (Int-SAC) access and tested for alcohol drinking while Int-HSD/SAC continued. Alcohol drinking significantly decreased (~30%) in both HSD and SAC groups compared to the controls. These data identify the critical parameters by which acute intermittent PD access reduces alcohol drinking and could have important therapeutic implications in the management of alcoholism.
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