Environmental enrichment can reduce cocaine use, researchers findApril 07, 2008WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Simple environmental enrichment and increased social stress can both affect the level of individual drug use, according to new monkey research at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. Previous research has shown that social rank - whether animals are dominant or subordinate within their social groups - can affect the amount of cocaine that monkeys will self-administer. Housed in groups of four, male cynomolgus monkeys will invariably stratify by social rank from the most dominant to the most subordinate. Once exposed to cocaine and taught to self-administer the drug, the more subordinate animals are far more inclined to engage in the human equivalent of serious drug abuse than are the dominant animals. Research has shown differences in certain neurochemicals in the brains of the animals, both as predictors and results of the social ranking, and therefore as predictors of drug abuse.
But would additional environmental enrichment or increased stress have an effect on cocaine self-administration" The answer is yes, according to a report today (April 6) by Wake Forest researcher Michael A. Nader, Ph.D., at Experimental Biology 2008 in San Diego. The presentation was part of the scientific program of the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET). Nader and colleagues worked with a group of 24 cynomolgus macaques who were already categorized socially. For additional enrichment, the monkeys were placed in larger-than-normal cages for three days. For increased stress, they were placed next to another social group for 15 minutes, acting as an intruder to that group. The monkeys were then given their usual choice of an intravenous cocaine mixture or food pellets. The enrichment reduced the drug response of all the animals; however, the detrimental affect of the stress - more drug intake, less food - was more prominent in the subordinate monkeys. "This is very significant for at least two reasons," said Nader, professor of physiology and pharmacology and of radiology. "First, it is a result that could be directly applied to the human situation. It suggests that a better environment could alleviate at least some of the risk that individuals will turn to drugs. "Secondly, we are talking about very rudimentary enrichment here - just a slightly improved living condition. Imagine what the effect could be with higher quality but easily achievable enrichment, such as interesting activities." Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Related Environmental Enrichment Current Events and Environmental Enrichment News Articles Prenatal drinking, environmental enrichment: effects on neurotrophins are independent of each other Prenatal alcohol exposure may be particularly destructive for neurotrophins, a family of peptides that influence the growth, development and functional plasticity of the fetal brain. Mental and physical exercise improves genetic mental impairment Australian scientists have shown that mental and physical exercise can improve coordination and movement problems in Rett syndrome, a devastating genetic brain development disorder that primarily affects females. Subordinate monkeys more likely to choose cocaine over food Having a lower social standing increases the likelihood that a monkey faced with a stressful situation will choose cocaine over food, according to a study at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. More dominant monkeys undergoing the same stressful situation had fewer changes in brain activity in areas of the brain involved in stress and anxiety and were less likely to choose cocaine. Growth factors and environment combine to increase brain maturation A new study showing that growth factors and the environment combine to increase brain maturation appears in the May 30th issue of the online, open-access journal PLoS ONE. Enhanced environment restores memory in mice with neurodegeneration Mice whose brains had lost a large number of neurons due to neurodegeneration regained long-term memories and the ability to learn after their surroundings were enriched with toys and other sensory stimuli. Research Explains How Lead Exposure Produces Learning Deficits A study of young adult rats by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health provides evidence that explains exactly how exposure to lead during brain development produces learning deficits. New treatment possibilities for fatal genetic disease Researchers at Melbourne's Howard Florey Institute have opened up new treatment possibilities for Huntington's disease by proving a scientific theory incorrect. Weizmann Institute suggests that immune cells help to maintain cognition and brain cell renewal A team of scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science, led by Prof. Michal Schwartz of the Neurobiology Department, has come up with new findings that may have implications in delaying and slowing down cognitive deterioration in old age. Stuck in a rut: repetitive rituals of lab, zoo and farm animals a symptom of altered brain function Animals kept in captivity exhibit stereotypic behaviour that is fundamentally similar to that seen in human conditions of autism and schizophrenia; a finding that could confound some behavioural experiments using animals, according to Dr Georgia Mason from University of Oxford speaking at the BA Festival of Science [10.50hrs 11 September 2002]. Animals in zoos, farms and laboratories are often seen gnawing repetitively, pacing back and forward or carrying out other apparently functionless behaviours. The BBSRC-funded research has enabled the Oxford scientists to link, for the first time, the stereotypic behaviour of captive bank voles (mouse-like rodents) to changes in a region of the brain Quality of life for lab animals THE drive to improve the lives of laboratory animals is having an unforeseen effect. Enriching the living conditions of rats, mice and other animals changes both their behaviour and their physiology, new studies show. This will have an increasingly important effect on the outcome of scientific experiments, including drugs trials. Animal welfare is a serious concern, and no one is advocating halting the drive to improve lab animals` living conditions by enriching their environment. The European Commission is planning to make recommendations on ways to improve conditions for lab animals. But the new studies show that researchers will have to be e More Environmental Enrichment Current Events and Environmental Enrichment News Articles |
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