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Evidence that intermittent, excessive sugar intake causes endogenous opioid dependence

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Date
2005-11-18
Author
Rada R., Pedro Vicente
Colantuoni, Carlo
McCarthy, Joseph
Patten, Caroline
Avena, Nicole M.
Chadeayne, Andrew
Hoebel, Bartley G.
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Abstract
Evidence that intermittent, excessive sugar intake causes endogenous opioid dependence Colantuoni, Carlo; Rada, Pedro; McCarthy, Joseph; Patten, Caroline; Avena, Nicole M.; Chadeayne, Andrew and Hoebel, Bartley G. Abstract Evidence that intermittent, excessive sugar intake causes endogenous opiod dependence. Obes Res. 2002;10:478-488. Objective: The goal was to determine whether withdrawal from sugar can cause signs of opioid dependence. Because palatable food stimulates neural systems that are implicated in drug addiction, it was hypothesized that intermittent, excessive sugar intake might create dependency, as indicated by withdrawal signs. Research Methods and Procedures: Male rats were fooddeprived for 12 hours daily, including 4 hours in the early dark, and then offered highly palatable 25% glucose in addition to chow for the next 12 hours. Withdrawal was induced by naloxone or food deprivation. Withdrawal signs were measured by observation, ultrasonic recordings, elevated plus maze tests, and in vivo microdialysis. Results: Naloxone (20 mg/kg intraperitoneally) caused somatic signs, such as teeth chattering, forepaw tremor, and head shakes. Food deprivation for 24 hours caused spontaneous withdrawal signs, such as teeth chattering. Naloxone (3 mg/kg subcutaneously) caused reduced time on the exposed arm of an elevated plus maze, where again significant teeth chattering was recorded. The plus maze anxiety effect was replicated with four control groups for comparison. Accumbens microdialysis revealed that naloxone (10 and 20 mg/kg intraperitoneally) decreased extracellular dopamine (DA), while dose-dependently increasing acetylcholine (ACh). The naloxone-induced DA/ACh imbalance was replicated with 10% sucrose and 3 mg/kg naloxone subcutaneously. Discussion: Repeated, excessive intake of sugar created a state in which an opioid antagonist caused behavioral and neurochemical signs of opioid withdrawal. The indices of anxiety and DA/ACh imbalance were qualitatively similar to withdrawal from morphine or nicotine, suggesting that the rats had become sugar-dependent. Artículo Publicado en: OBESITY RESEARCH Vol. 10 No. 6 June 2002
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http://www.saber.ula.ve/handle/123456789/16164
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Univesidad de Los Andes

  • Rectorado
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  • Secretaría

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Contact Us | Send Feedback

Licencia Creative Commons Todos los documentos publicados en este repositorio se distribuyen bajo una
Licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 3.0 Venezuela .

SaberULA Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela 2018.

DSpaceDSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace.
Theme by  Atmire NV