The "First Hit" Toward Alcohol Reinforcement: Role of Ethanol Metabolites
Author
dc.contributor.author
Israel Jacard, Yedy
Author
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Quintanilla González, María Elena
Author
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Karahanian, Eduardo
Author
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Rivera Meza, Mario
Author
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Herrera-Marschitz Muller, Mario
Admission date
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2015-09-04T15:40:21Z
Available date
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2015-09-04T15:40:21Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Alcoholism-Clinical and Experimental Research Vol. 39, No. 5 May 2015
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1111/acer.12709
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/133418
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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This review analyzes literature that describes the behavioral effects of 2 metabolites of ethanol (EtOH):
acetaldehyde and salsolinol (a condensation product of acetaldehyde and dopamine) generated in the
brain. These metabolites are self-administered into specific brain areas by animals, showing strong reinforcing
effects. A wealth of evidence shows that EtOH, a drug consumed to attain millimolar concentrations,
generates brain metabolites that are reinforcing at micromolar and nanomolar concentrations.
Salsolinol administration leads to marked increases in voluntary EtOH intake, an effect inhibited by
mu-opioid receptor blockers. In animals that have ingested EtOH chronically, the maintenance of alcohol
intake is no longer influenced by EtOH metabolites, as intake is taken over by other brain systems.
However, after EtOH withdrawal brain acetaldehyde has a major role in promoting binge-like drinking
in the condition known as the “alcohol deprivation effect”; a condition seen in animals that have
ingested alcohol chronically, are deprived of EtOH for extended periods, and are allowed EtOH
re-access. The review also analyzes the behavioral effects of acetate, a metabolite that enters the brain
and is responsible for motor incoordination at low doses of EtOH. Also discussed are the paradoxical
effects of systemic acetaldehyde. Overall, evidence strongly suggests that brain-generated EtOH metabolites
play a major role in the early (“first-hit”) development of alcohol reinforcement and in the generation
of relapse-like drinking.