ADDITIVE PHYSICAL-DEPENDENCE - EVIDENCE FOR A COMMON MECHANISM IN ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 210 (1) , 87-90
Abstract
In previous studies it was demonstrated that mice could be made physically dependent with 3 or 6 days inhalation of tert-butanol or ethanol vapor. In the present experiments the mice were treated with 3 days of tert-butanol followed immediately by 3 days of ethanol at equipotent concentrations, for a total of 6 days continuous exposure. Other mice were given these alcohols in the reverse order. Withdrawal reactions, quantitated by scoring convulsions elicited by handling, were equivalent to those resulting from 6 days exposure to either alcohol alone. One alcohol not only substituted for the other in the maintenance of dependence, but also augmented the abstinence syndrome produced by the first 3 days exposure. An additive effect of ethanol and tert-butanol in producing a withdrawal reaction is apparently consistent with the hypothesis of a single underlying mechanism for producing physical dependence on alcohols. This experimental model may be useful for studying cross-dependence.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- QUANTITATIVE COMPARISON OF PHYSICAL-DEPENDENCE ON TERTIARY BUTANOL AND ETHANOL IN MICE - CORRELATION WITH LIPID SOLUBILITY1979
- Physico-chemical correlates of alcohol intoxicationNeuropharmacology, 1978
- EFFECTS OF LOW CONCENTRATIONS OF ETHANOL ON FLUIDITY OF SPIN-LABELED ERYTHROCYTE AND BRAIN MEMBRANES1977
- Relative Intoxicating Effects on Rats of Ethyl, Propyl and Butyl AlcoholsActa Pharmacologica et Toxicologica, 1960
- PARTIAL EQUIVALENCE OF CHRONIC ALCOHOL AND BARBITURATE INTOXICATIONS1957