Abstract
Alcohol use disorder is pervasive and effects the health of millions. Identifying factors such as early life stress that contribute to the development of alcohol use disorder is therefore critical, especially those that contribute to adolescent drinking, a strong predictor of AUD development. The majority of prior studies have examined early life effects on adult drinking, but have not studied intake during adolescence, and no prior studies have examined how the effects of multiple stressors may be additive. Therefore, this study determined if experiencing individual or multiple stressors increases adolescent alcohol intake. Male Long Evans rats underwent either early or late maternal separation (postnatal day 2–9 or 13–20), early adolescent social defeat (PND 30–40), both, or neither. All rats were then given two-hour access to alcohol, and voluntary intake assessed daily in late adolescence (PND 41–51). In adulthood, sensitivity to alcohol’s sedative effects was assessed using loss and regain of righting reflex tests. Results indicate that experiencing maternal separation (at either time point) or social defeat increased adolescent alcohol consumption, but experiencing the combined stressors did not, and that no stressor significantly affected body weight during adolescence or loss and regain of righting reflex in adulthood. Overall, this pattern of effects suggests that experiencing any individual early life stressor may increase adolescent alcohol intake, in agreement with prior literature, but that the combined effects of multiple early life stressors may be more complicated.
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