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Acute Administration of Ethanol and of a D1-Receptor Antagonist Affects the Behavior and Neurochemistry of Adult Zebrafish.

Alcohol abuse represents major societal problems, an unmet medical need resulting from our incomplete understanding of the mechanisms underlying alcohol's actions in the brain. To uncover these mechanisms, animal models have been proposed. Here, we explore the effects of acute alcohol administration in zebrafish, a promising animal model in alcohol research. One mechanism via which alcohol may influence behavior is the dopaminergic neurotransmitter system. As a proof-of-concept analysis, we study how D1 dopamine-receptor antagonism may alter the effects of acute alcohol on the behavior of adult zebrafish and on whole brain levels of neurochemicals. We conduct these analyses using a quasi-inbred strain, AB, and a genetically heterogeneous population SFWT. Our results uncover significant alcohol x D1-R antagonist interaction and main effects of these factors in shoaling, but only additive effects of these factors in measures of exploratory behavior. We also find interacting and main effects of alcohol and the D1-R antagonist on dopamine and DOPAC levels, but only alcohol effects on serotonin. We also uncover several strain dependent effects. These results demonstrate that acute alcohol may act through dopaminergic mechanisms for some but not all behavioral phenotypes, a novel discovery, and also suggest that strain differences may, in the future, help us identify molecular mechanisms underlying acute alcohol effects.

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Improving the social responsiveness of medical schools: lessons from the Canadian experience.

The recent Canadian experience in promoting social accountability and social responsiveness of medical schools has been one of steady improvement in certain institutions, against a background lacking overall national policy direction. Canada has several distinct advantages in trying to devise means of enhancing social accountability of medical training and health services, including a strong national system of publicly supported and financed health care of high quality, a network of excellent academic medical centers, and well-established accreditation bodies. A review of the literature, complemented by a new survey of Canadian medical schools, confirms that some of the centers, conscious of the need to promote social responsiveness, are developing innovative programs to do so. Future progress toward the goal of social responsiveness of medical schools on a pan-Canadian basis will require a more cohesive approach involving systematic sharing of best practices among academic health centers, effective alliances with other health professionals to promote these objectives, and support by federal and provincial ministries of health. Canadian awareness of an international movement tending to similar objectives would support the efforts of Canadian health professionals engaged in practices of enhanced accountability.

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