Projects per year
Abstract
Background:
Psychedelics, like lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), are again being studied as potential therapies for many neuropsychiatric disorders, including addictions. At the same time, the acute effects of psychedelics on rewarding behaviours have been scarcely studied.
Aims:
The current study aimed to clarify if LSD decreases binge-like ethanol drinking in mice, and whether the observed acute effects on ethanol consumption are generalizable to a natural reinforcer, sucrose, and if the effects resulted from aversive or reward-attenuating effects caused by LSD.
Methods:
The effects of acute LSD were examined using 2-bottle choice intermittent ethanol (20%) and sucrose drinking (10%), discrete-trial current-intensity threshold method of intracranial self-stimulation and short-term feeding behaviour assay in C57BL/6 male mice.
Results:
The results showed that acute 0.1 mg/kg, but not 0.05 mg/kg, dose (i.p.) of LSD reduced 2-h intermittent ethanol drinking transiently without any prolonged effects. No effects were seen in intermittent 2-h sucrose drinking. The tested LSD doses had neither effect on the intracranial self-stimulation current-intensity thresholds, nor did LSD affect the threshold-lowering, or rewarding, effects of simultaneous amphetamine treatment. Furthermore, LSD had small, acute diminishing effects on 2-h food and water intake.
Conclusions:
Based on these results, LSD decreases binge-like ethanol drinking in mice, but only acutely. This effect is not likely to stem from reward-attenuating effects but could be in part due to reduced consummatory behaviour.
Psychedelics, like lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), are again being studied as potential therapies for many neuropsychiatric disorders, including addictions. At the same time, the acute effects of psychedelics on rewarding behaviours have been scarcely studied.
Aims:
The current study aimed to clarify if LSD decreases binge-like ethanol drinking in mice, and whether the observed acute effects on ethanol consumption are generalizable to a natural reinforcer, sucrose, and if the effects resulted from aversive or reward-attenuating effects caused by LSD.
Methods:
The effects of acute LSD were examined using 2-bottle choice intermittent ethanol (20%) and sucrose drinking (10%), discrete-trial current-intensity threshold method of intracranial self-stimulation and short-term feeding behaviour assay in C57BL/6 male mice.
Results:
The results showed that acute 0.1 mg/kg, but not 0.05 mg/kg, dose (i.p.) of LSD reduced 2-h intermittent ethanol drinking transiently without any prolonged effects. No effects were seen in intermittent 2-h sucrose drinking. The tested LSD doses had neither effect on the intracranial self-stimulation current-intensity thresholds, nor did LSD affect the threshold-lowering, or rewarding, effects of simultaneous amphetamine treatment. Furthermore, LSD had small, acute diminishing effects on 2-h food and water intake.
Conclusions:
Based on these results, LSD decreases binge-like ethanol drinking in mice, but only acutely. This effect is not likely to stem from reward-attenuating effects but could be in part due to reduced consummatory behaviour.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 02698811221104641 |
Journal | Journal of Psychopharmacology |
Volume | 36 |
Issue number | 7 |
Pages (from-to) | 860-874 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISSN | 0269-8811 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jul 2022 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Fields of Science
- 3112 Neurosciences
- 3111 Biomedicine
- 317 Pharmacy
- Reward
- intracranial self-stimulation
- ethanol
- lysergic acid diethylamide
- sucrose
- PLACE PREFERENCE
- SEX-DIFFERENCES
- LSD
- CONSUMPTION
- REWARD
- ALCOHOLISM
- RECEPTORS
- THRESHOLD
- AVERSION
- BEHAVIOR
Projects
- 1 Active
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Serotonin receptor agonism in the modulation of the addiction-related circuits
01/07/2018 → 31/12/2024
Project: Research project
Activities
- 1 Organisation and participation in conferences, workshops, courses, seminars
-
FENS Forum 2022
Lauri Elsilä (Poster Presentation)
9 Jul 2022 → 13 Jul 2022Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Organisation and participation in conferences, workshops, courses, seminars