Abstract
The time courses of changes in sensitivity to handling-induced hyperexcitability, audiogenic seizures and a variety of chemical convulsants were compared in mice during a 24-hr period after withdrawal from chronic ethanol treatment. The peak increase in handling-induced hyperexcitability was seen between 3 and 5 hr after the withdrawal, disappearing by 12 hr, whereas the peak sensitivity to an audiogenic stimulus was found 8 hr into the withdrawal period. No changes were seen in thresholds to bicuculline during the 24-hr study. The thresholds to N-methyl-D-aspartate were decreased during the withdrawal period, with a maximum change at the 16-hr interval. In contrast, the thresholds to aminophylline were increased at 4 hr into withdrawal. The thresholds to 4-aminopyridine were also increased, with maximum changes at the 8-hr and 12-hr intervals. The only alterations in sensitivity to methyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylate and kainate were increases in the thresholds immediately on withdrawal, which were likely to have been due to residual ethanol. The results indicate that a complex pattern of neuronal changes occurs during ethanol withdrawal with a series of alterations in responses to convulsive stimuli which differ both in direction and in time course, suggesting different underlying mechanisms.
JPET articles become freely available 12 months after publication, and remain freely available for 5 years.Non-open access articles that fall outside this five year window are available only to institutional subscribers and current ASPET members, or through the article purchase feature at the bottom of the page.
|