11-10-2022, 10:46 PM
Sound Familiar?
We've all been there: after a particularly long and stressful day, nothing sounds better than heading to the nearest watering hole for a drink. There's a reason for this—stress and alcohol target similar neural systems, particularly the brain's reward center. The problem is chronic stress, rather than just the occasional bad day, actually alters the brain's reward circuitry, creating a feedback loop that leads to increasing alcohol consumption.
The link between chronic stress and alcohol abuse is pretty well established, but the underlying brain chemistry responsible for this connection is not well understood. To tackle this problem, a team of neuroscientists at the University of Pennsylvania exposed rats to an acute stress and then allowed the rodents to self-administer alcohol after being stressed while the team monitored the rats' neuronal activity.
As the team detailed in a paper published in Neuron, the rats were exposed to a restraint stress (in which a rat is basically put inside a tube only slightly larger than its body) for one hour, and then 15 hours later the researchers measured how much sugar water laced with alcohol the rats consumed.
What they found was that the stressed out rats drank significantly more alcohol than non-stressed rats and increased their alcohol intake over the course of several weeks.
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/stresse...d-familiar
We've all been there: after a particularly long and stressful day, nothing sounds better than heading to the nearest watering hole for a drink. There's a reason for this—stress and alcohol target similar neural systems, particularly the brain's reward center. The problem is chronic stress, rather than just the occasional bad day, actually alters the brain's reward circuitry, creating a feedback loop that leads to increasing alcohol consumption.
The link between chronic stress and alcohol abuse is pretty well established, but the underlying brain chemistry responsible for this connection is not well understood. To tackle this problem, a team of neuroscientists at the University of Pennsylvania exposed rats to an acute stress and then allowed the rodents to self-administer alcohol after being stressed while the team monitored the rats' neuronal activity.
As the team detailed in a paper published in Neuron, the rats were exposed to a restraint stress (in which a rat is basically put inside a tube only slightly larger than its body) for one hour, and then 15 hours later the researchers measured how much sugar water laced with alcohol the rats consumed.
What they found was that the stressed out rats drank significantly more alcohol than non-stressed rats and increased their alcohol intake over the course of several weeks.
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/stresse...d-familiar