Abstract

An ethanol withdrawal syndrome was elicited by witholding ethanol from physically dependent, male Sprange-Dawley rats. Ethanol dependence has been induced by intragastric administration of ethanol at a dosage of 9 to 15 grams per kilogram per day over a four-day period. Oral administration of 3-hydroxybutyrate, a compound which is elevated in blood of ethanol dependent rats and is a substrate of both the cerebral small-pool and large-pool Krebs-cycle, was effective in suppressing the tremulous component of the ethanol withdrawal syndrome. 3-Hydroxybutyrate did not function as a central nervous system depressant at the dose levels employed.

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